Ends and Means

Maybe it's the engineer in me, but I find the debate over what to
do next in Iraq maddening. Engineers figure out how to do practical
projects based on a set of desired deliverables (the "requirements"),
a set of economic constraints, and the basic rules of science and
logic. Sometimes you're able to nail a project plan down so tightly
you can predict its delivery with a high degree of certainty. Most
of the time there's some uncertainty -- things you have to learn or
invent, things that go wrong for innumerable reasons, things you
discover you didn't really understand until it's too late. Of all
the things that can go wrong, one of the worst is when you have some
group actively sabotaging your project. There's a vast amount of
literature and lore on complex engineering projects, and there's
still a fair amount of art to managing them, as well as a lot of
science. Given all we know about large, complex projects, you'd
think that anyone undertaking one would try to make use of that
expertise.

Invading and occupying Iraq is one of the most complex and
difficult projects that anyone has undertaken. All projects have
something called a "life cycle" -- a series of stages that start
with the initial rough concept and proceed through more detailed
planning through implementation and testing, delivery of a final
product, and what is often a long maintenance phase. The better
you understand all of this, the more accurately you can calculate
costs and benefits -- and therefore determine whether a project
is doing in the first place. When you don't know enough early on
in a project, you run a risk that problems will develop -- even
to the point that the whole project will fail. For most projects,
problems force us to consider trade-offs: spend more and/or cut
back on the requirements. And some projects fail completely.

Iraq appears to be just such a complete failure, but there is
a problem proving that. The problem is that we never established
what the project's requirements actually are. The Bush junta blew
lots of smoke about "weapons of mass destruction," "global war on
terror," freedom, democracy, remaking the Middle East, etc., but
they never narrowed this down to something an engineer could base
a plan on. On the other hand, they appear to have had some hidden
agendas. You can try to sort out what they really intended to do
by what they actually tried to do, but it's hard to do much more
than speculate, given how their much incompetence and corruption
obscures their acts. For instance, Mark Danner's recent New York
Review of Books piece on "Bush's Fantasy War" shows Paul Bremer,
Donald Rumsfeld, and NSC's Steven Hadley all passing the buck on
the CPA's fateful de-Baathification order, which seems to have
popped out unreviewed from some unnamed someone's hind quarters.
If there had been a clear set of requirements, and a clear-headed
review process, such an order could not have been given, at least
without additional provisions for the probable consequences. As
critics like Danner dig through the decision-making process, some
things become clear.

One is that the Bush Administration achieved consensus on going
to war, but not on why, how, what outcome they expected, or even
what outcome they wanted. As Danner puts this:

Anyone wanting to answer the question of "how we began" in Iraq
has to confront the monumental fact that the United States, the most
powerful country in the world, invaded Iraq with no particular and
specific idea of what it was going to do there, and then must try to
explain how this could have happened.

As Danner points out, even before 9/11 the Bush Administration
had sought to break down most of the processes that might stand as
obstacles to their ability to act. But he doesn't turn over those
rocks to see what may have motivated what has turned out to be a
deliberate blinding, self-lobotomization even, of government. The
clearest examples I know of are in environmental regulation. Many
construction projects require environmental impact studies. These
cost money, take time, and sometimes derail projects. Like almost
everything else in America, they are done adversarially, and that
tends to blind both developers and regulators to the merits of
the other side. Bush's election (or whatever it was) tilted power
to the side of the anti-regulators, consistent with their bias
for action vs. review. That works for a little while, as long as
nothing really bad happens that review might have anticipated.
Like Iraq.

Such intentional blindness is consistent with a dimming of the
public mind -- what we see as the coming of a new dark age. This
takes many forms: eschewing science and reason, covering up or
denying facts, limiting and filtering public speech, promoting
myths based on faith. The Bush Administration has been remarkably
successful at each of these, and their very success is that has
left them so untethered to reality. But they're not inventing
their policies from whole cloth. They're working with trends that
have been in force for a while now -- Reagan's restoration of the
rich and the martial being the major turning point, built on an
erosion of the New Deal that began with America's superpower
triumph in WWII and set up the global class war, aka the Cold
War.

Now that Iraq has unspinnably fallen apart, the temptation for
the various pro-war factions, in the Administration and out, is
to remind us of their differences, as each difference provides an
excuse for their common failure. Rumsfeld, given his central role
and natural arrogance has provided a particularly good target,
especially among those inclined to let the buck stop short of Bush.
However, the worst problem is the one belief they held in common:
namely, that war, invasion, and occupation would provide a viable
method to achieve their various aims. All that war achieved in Iraq
was to break a nation, which had already suffered immensely, into
a fractured, fratricidal, chaotic shell, while showing the US and
its allies to be cynical, brutal, utterly careless except for their
own concerns. It is by no means certain that there were no factions
in the pro-war camp who wanted to achieve just that. There is, after
all, a very similar strain in Israeli foreign policy, as evidenced
both in the '80s and recently by their sieges in Lebanon. For those
people there is a correlation between means and ends.

For everyone else, Iraq has been a massive failure to understand
what war actually does. An honest planning process, making an earnest
attempt to match means to well-defined and agreed-upon ends, would
more than help -- it's well nigh impossible to achieve what we want
without such a process. But we are a long ways from any such thing.
We are divided in our goals -- mostly we seem incapable of grasping
that we are all in this world together. And we are divided in our
understanding of how means work -- especially armed force, which so
many of us tend to romanticize, even though vast experience should
have taught us otherwise.

Another quote from Danner's article -- a long review of Bob
Woodward's State of Denial, Ron Suskind's The One Percent
Doctrine, and James Risen's State of War -- on the process
question:

Woodward tends to blame "the broken policy process" on the relative
strength of personalities gathered around the cabinet table: the power
and ruthlessness of Rumsfeld, the legendary "bureaucratic infighter";
the weakness of Rice, the very function and purpose of whose job, to
let the President both benefit from and control the bureaucracy, was
in effect eviscerated. Suskind, more convincingly, argues that Bush
and Cheney constructed precisely the government they wanted:
centralized, highly secretive, its clean, direct lines of decision
unencumbered by information or consultation. "There was never any
policy process to break, by Condi or anyone else," Richard Armitage,
the former deputy secretary of state, remarks to Suskind. "There was
never one from the start. Bush didn't want one, for whatever reason."
[ . . . ]

To the rest of the government, of course, this "mystery" must have
been excruciating to endure; Suskind describes how many of those in
the "foreign policy establishment" found themselves "befuddled" by the
way the traditional policy process was viewed not only as unproductive
but "perfidious." Information, that is, could slow decision-making;
indeed, when it had to do with a bold and risky venture like the Iraq
war, information and discussion -- an airing, say, of the precise
obstacles facing a "democratic transition" conducted with a handful of
troops -- could paralyze it. If the sober consideration of history and
facts stood in the way of bold action then it would be the history and
the facts that would be discarded. The risk of doing nothing, the
risk, that is, of the status quo, justified acting. Given the grim
facts on the ground -- the likelihood of a future terrorist attack
from the "malignant" Middle East, the impossibility of entirely
protecting the country from it -- better to embrace the unknown.
Better, that is, to act in the cause of "constructive instability."

I've read Suskind's book, but not Woodward or Risen. One of the
most striking things about Suskind's book is that there is no hint
of an effort to develop a reasoned risk assessment of terrorism.
This is in stark contrast to a flood, say, which engineers quickly
know how to evaluate as a 1-in-100 year or 1-in-1000 year event --
terms that can feed directly into a reasoned evaluation of risks
and countermeasures. You can understand why politicians didn't want
to get into that sort of dispassionate analysis, but by not doing
so -- and by not allowing anyone who worked for them to do so --
they repeatedly flew off the handle at even the most marginal and
in some cases dubious threats. In Suskind's book this happens dozens
and dozens of times; it's so common it becomes the overarching theme
of the book, represented by Cheney's dictum that any threat with a
one percent chance of happening has to be responded to as if it were
a certainty. (That dictum has only the most superficial relationship
to real risk assessment, a superficiality that proves deep lack of
understanding.)

Several places Danner refers to a classified pre-invasion document
on objectives and procedures. So maybe they had a set of requirements,
but by classifying them they were useless for evaluating the policies
that followed, or indeed for deciding whether the program was worth
the costs and risks of implementation. Evidently, much of what the US
did in Iraq was improvised on the spot, with scarcely a nod to prewar
intentions. Danner summarizes where this chain of errors, deceptions,
and malfeasances have brought us:

Nearly four years into the Iraq war, as we enter the Time of
Proposed Solutions, the consequences of those early decisions define
the bloody landscape. By dismissing and humiliating the soldiers and
officers of the Iraqi army our leaders, in effect, did much to recruit
the insurgency. By bringing far too few troops to secure Saddam's
enormous arms depots they armed it. By bringing too few to keep order
they presided over the looting and overwhelming violence and social
disintegration that provided the insurgency such fertile soil. By
blithely purging tens of thousands of the country's Baathist elite,
whatever their deeds, and by establishing a muscle-bound and inept
American occupation without an "Iraqi face," they created an
increasing resentment among Iraqis that fostered the insurgency and
encouraged people to shelter it. And by providing too few troops to
secure Iraq's borders they helped supply its forces with an unending
number of Sunni Islamic extremists from neighboring states. It was the
foreign Islamists' strategy above all to promote their jihadist cause
by provoking a sectarian civil war in Iraq; by failing to prevent
their attacks and to protect the Shia who became their targets, the US
leaders have allowed them to succeed.

To Americans now, the hour appears very late in Iraq. Deeply weary
of a war that early on lost its reason for being, most Americans want
nothing more than to be shown a way out. The President and his
counselors, even in the weeks before the election, had begun
redefining the idea of victory, dramatically downgrading the goals
that were set out in the National Security Presidential Directive of
August 2002.

Still, watching excerpts of Bush and Maliki in Amman today, I'm
struck by how tenaciously Bush continues to resist reality. In doing
so, he ignores some of the most predictable effects of war: that the
longer war drags on, the more damage, both physical and psychic, to
all sides, and the greater the risk of further war. He still clings
to the idea that he can pull some sort of victory out of the debacle,
as if his victory is all that matters. After doing so much
damage, the least he could do is to admit that he screwed up.
Unfortunately, he seems incapable of even that decency.

Sinking Yachts

From the New York Times, Nov. 28, David Cay Johnston, a piece
called "'04 Income In U.S. Was Below 2000 Level":

Despite significant gains in 2004, the total income Americans
reported ito the tax collector that year, adjusted for inflation, was
still below its peak in 2000, new government data shows.

Reported income totaled $7.044 trillion in 2004, the latest year
for which data is available, down from more than $7.143 trillion in
2000, new Internal Revenue Service data shows.

Total reported income, in 2004 dollars, fell 1.4 percent, but
because the population grew during that period average real incomes
declined more than twice as much, falling $1,641, or 3 percent, to
$53,974.

A White House spokesman blamed the 2000 stock market bubble for
distorting the figures. That's unlikely to impress anyone who didn't
benefit from owning stock then, and for that matter isn't likely to
please anyone who did own stock and got hosed. These are aggregate
figures, so they ignore any zero-sum shift from poor to rich -- of
which there seems to be quite a bit. But even if you buy the line
that a rising tide raises all boats, the corollary is that with a
sinking boat everyone gets wet.

Richardson: What Terrorists Want

Louise Richardson's book, What Terrorists Want: Understanding the
Enemy, Containing the Threat (2006, Random House, 312 pp.) provides
an uncommon amount of common sense as well as comprehensive research
on terrorism and Bush's misbegotten war. She grew up in an Irish
community disposed to support the IRA, before breaking away into
academia, where she became an expert at comparing and generalizing
from the entire range of terrorist movements. I've collected a lot
of quotes from this book, which follow. In a future post I'll try
to develop my own views. So for now, this is mostly background info.
I've tended to pull out conclusions. The book itself has numerous
examples, of which the current Islamist focus of Bush's War is just
one.

She starts off with a definition (pp. 4-6):

Terrorism simply means deliberately and violently targeting
civilians for politican purposes. It has seven crucial
characteristics. First, a terrorist act is politically inspired. If
not, then it is simply a crime. [ . . . ]

Second, if an act does not involve violence or the threat of
violence, it is not terrorism. [ . . . ]

Third, the point of terrorism is not to defeat the enemy but to
send a message. Writing of the September 11 attacks, an al-Qaeda
spokesman declared, "It rang the bells of restoring Arab and Islamic
glory."

Fourth, the act and the victim usually have symbolic
significance. Bin Laden referred to the Twin Towers as "icons" of
America's "military and economic power." The shock value of the act is
enormously enhanced by the symbolism of the target. The whole point is
for the psychological impact to be greater than the actual physical
act. Terrorism is indeed a weapon of the weak. Terrorist movements are
invariably both outmanned and outgunned by their opponents, so they
employ such tactics in an effort to gain more attention than any
objective assessment of their capabilities would suggest that they
warrant.

Fifth -- and this is a controversial point -- terrorism is the act
of substate groups, not states. [ . . . ]

A sixth characteristic of terrorism is that the victim of the
violence and the audience the terrorists are trying to reach are not
the same. Victims are used as a means of altering the behavior of a
larger audience, usually a government. Victims are chosen either at
random or as representative of some larger group. Individual victims
are interchangeable. [ . . . ] This is different
from most other forms of political violence, in which security forces
or state representatives are targeted in an effort to reduce the
strength of an opponent.

The final and most important defining characteristic of terrorism
is the deliberate targeting of civilians. This is what sets terrorism
apart from other forms of political violence, even the most proximate
form, guerrilla warfare. Terrorists have elevated practices that are
normally seen as the excesses of warfare to routine practice, striking
noncombatants not as an unintended side effect but as deliberate
strategy.

Some sort of definition is a necessary starting point, especially
if you're trying to develop a comparison set. This one works, although
it reflects a subtle bias: it takes the state's view that terrorism
is something others do, ignoring the fact that states often do as bad
or worse. But it is more limited than most states' charges, which are
quick to brand every violent political act against the state as an
act of terrorism. Another bias is to exclude non-violent disruptions,
such as sabotaging computer networks ("cyberterrorism"). The latter
is helpful is that by excluding nonviolent resistance this makes the
threshold of interest to be violence itself. The distinction between
terrorism and guerrilla warfare matters less, as both are based on
violence, on applying force against government power. In point of
fact, those distinctions are ultimately so hard to make as to become
meaningless. Even the most disciplined military operation results
in unplanned, if not unforseeable, violence against noncombatants.
Trying to justify such operations takes you over a moral line.

First, a basic rule (p. 40):

The emergence of terrorism requires a lethal cocktail with three
ingredients: a disaffected individual, an enabling group, and a
legitimizing ideology.

On the frequency of terrorism (pp. 40-41):

There are at least two reasons why it is very difficult to come up
with a convincing explanation for terrorism. The first is that there
are so many terrorists. The second is that there are so few. Terrorism
is a tactic employed by many different groups in many different parts
of the world in pursuit of many different objectives. It cocurs in
democracies, autocracies, and, most often, transitional states. On the
other hand, there are actually very few terrorists. If Islam causes
terrorism, with 1.2 billion Muslims in the world and, at most, a few
thousand Islamic terrorists, why are there not more? If the social
revolutionary movements in Europe in the seventies were caused by the
alienation of disaffected youths, why were there not more terrorists?
Alienation was widespread among European and American youths, but
there were actually very few members of the RAF, Action Directe, the
CCC, and the Red Brigades in Germany, France, Belgium, and Italy,
respectively.

On the psychology of terrorism (p. 41):

From the vast literature on psychology, three points in particular
stand out. Terrorists see the world in Manichean, black-and-white
terms; they identify with others; and they desire revenge. They have a
highly oversimplified view of the world in which good is pitted
against evil and in which their adversaries are to blame for all their
woes. They tend to act not out of a desire for personal gratification
but on behalf of a group with which they identify (though the two
motives can of course coexist). Islamic terrorists, for example,
regularly invoke the suffering of Palestinians and other Muslims.

On the question of state sponsors of terrorism (pp. 51-52):

It is often, in fact, a political judgment as to who is or is not a
state sponsor of terrorism and who does and does not use terrorism as
an instrument of foreign policy. In the 1970s, the USSR and Cuba
topped the American public's list of state sponsors of terrorism. In
the 1980s, it was Iran and Libya. In the 1990s, Iraq and Syria. Yet if
you were to ask people in other countries, even in allied countries,
you would find the United States high on most lists, and if you were
to ask people in countries hostile to us you would find the United
States at the top of their list. The examples invoked in support of
the contention that the United States has sponsored terrorism would
include the Contras in Nicaragua, the American support for the
mujahedin in Afghanistan, and support for local groups trying to
overthrow Castro in Cuba and Allende in Chile.

Richardson messes up after this quote with some needless and
unuseful equivocations. The key point here is that terror groups
are invariably local based, even when they are able to attract
material support from foreign states. The states have their own
reasons for backing such groups -- usually some form of weakness,
including lack of popular domestic support which leads even a
strong nation to seek deniability. The reasons why states act
in this way are outside the scope of study here, but it is worth
noting that one reason terrorist groups exist is that they serve
the interests of states acting outside the limits of international
law. As such, stronger international law would help curb terrorism.

On the expectations of terrorists (p. 98):

Terrorists often have wildly optimistic expectations of the
reactions their action will elicit: American and Israeli withdrawal
from the Middle East, British withdrawal from Northern Ireland, the
collapse of capitalism. There are several revealing accounts of the
first meeting between British politicians and leaders of the IRA in
July 1972, including Martin McGuinness and a very young Gerry Adams,
who was released from Long Kesh internment camp for the occasion. The
British officials were stunned by the expectations of their
interlocutors, whom they considered, at best, young hooligans. The IRA
representatives insisted upon an immediate declaration from Britain of
its intent to withdraw from Northern Ireland and for the withdrawal to
be completed by January 1, 1975. [ . . . ] For
radical Islamists their faith that Allah is on their side best
explains their optimism. In the words of the Taliban leader, Mullah
Muhammad Omar, "America is very strong. Even if it were twice as
strong or twice that, it could not be strong enough to defeat us. We
are confident that no one can harm us if God is with us." This
optimism is reinforced by the group members, who create their own
reality. The more isolated from their society they become, the more
their optimistic fantasies go unchallenged.

Summarizing, Richardson writes, "So long as there is a reaction,
therefore, the terrorist purpose is served." She continues (p. 100):

Not reacting is hardly an option for a democratic country with a
free press. The actions of the terrorists and the spectacular nature
of their attacks are designed to make good television coverage. The
media then become tools for terrorists to spread fear. Though it
should be said that the media rarely spread sympathy for or
understanding of terrorists, they do publicize their actions and
thereby serve their purpose. The public are frightened and insist on
action to ensure their security. It is part of the power of terrorism
that the fear it spreads, due to the random nature of the victims,
tends to be out of all proportion to the actual threat posed. In an
effort to try to ensure the safety of their citizens and to
demonstrate their competence, governments invariably react strongly,
and often forcibly. Moreover, if governments do not act, not only do
they jeopardize their own political survival, but they run the risk
that terrorists will feel compelled to commit ever-larger atrocities
in order to elicit a reaction.

Maybe "not reacting is hardly an option," but how you react is
the real issue. What feeds the terrorists isn't reaction per se but
bad reaction. If political leaders can't resist the demands, often
amplified by the media but really rooted in political culture, for
revenge, they're letting the terrorists push their buttons. It may
be that democracy is particularly susceptible to demagoguery here,
but political leaders can be effective arguing both with and against
the wind. To take the specific case of Bush on 9/11, he chose a path
to war not just because the wind blew that way, but because he saw
political opportunities in that direction.

On suicide bombers (pp. 128-129):

In attempting to ascertain what it is that drives an individual to
volunteer to be a martyr in the first place, the evidence that, as
with terrorism in general, the key motivators are revenge, renown, and
reaction is very strong. From Chechens to Tamils to Palestinians to
Saudis, from women to men, from young to old, the words of volunteers
for suicide are replete with the language of revenge.
[ . . . ] Sometimes the desire is to avenge a
personal injury, the death or arrest of a relative, and sometimes it
is to avenge the ill-treatment of people they do not know but with
whom they identify. Often it is to avenge a sense of humiliation. The
longer a conflict continues, the more atrocities there are to be
avenged.

While the desire for revenge has proven to be a powerful motivator
in the human condition generally, in the past it has not sufficed to
propel people to commit suicide in large numbers. There are other
motivations at play too, and these are the social motivations, the
desir eto be loyal to your peers and to be revered in your
community. I cannot help getting the sense in seeing some of the final
videos, especially the less carefully scripted ones, that the
volunteers' desire to be the center of attention is being briefly
indulged by the movement's leaders before they are dispatched to war
as cannon fodder.

On the fear of WMD attacks by terrorists (p. 165):

In all the discussion of our vulnerabilities to WMDs, there was
almost no public discussion of the nature of the threat, no
distinctions drawn among chemical, biological, nuclear, and
radiological weapons, nor any public discussion of the limitations of
these weapons. Rather, government statements have tended to group all
forms of weapons of mass destruction together as an apocalyptic means
of destroying the country. In fact, as I have pointed out, there are
very real differences between the different types of weapons that are
linked under the rubric of WMD. Moreover, the lethality of any
biological and chemical weapons or dirty bombs likely to be acquired
by terrorist groups pales in comparison to that of natural disasters
such as Hurricane Katrina. [ . . . ]

The detonation of a nuclear bomb would undoubtedly be devastating
and would indeed constitute a turning point in history. But the
conflation of this risk with that posed by a hapless Frenchman
concocting ricin in his parents' spare bedroom serves only to
undermine our ability to formulate coherent and effective
counterrterrorist policies.

On America's response to 9/11 (p. 168):

Abroad, the American government conflated the threats it faced and
based its policies on the vulnerabilities it felt, rather than the
threats it faced. The heinousness of the attack, moreover, blinded the
United States to some of the legitimate objections to its policies
overseas. One thing that did not change was Americans' confidence in
the rectitude of their actions or the unassailability of their moral
position.

Domestically, a weak and unpopular president, recently elected with
a highly questionable mandate, was transformed into a war leader by a
population seeking the security of a strong leader. Believing that the
world had changed, we were prepared to accept changes in our
longstanding national security doctrine and infrastructure in
response. The enormous scale of the atrocity seemed to merit a
powerful response, and the United States responded with the most
potent weapon in its armory, a declaration of war. But the war was not
declared on those who had committed the crime, but rather on the
tactic they had used to hurt us. It was a war we could not win.

On the concept of a Global War on Terror (p. 176-177):

The problem with a declaration of war is that warfare conjures up
notions of victory and defeat. Yet, as was obvious at the time and as
we have begun to realize since, it is very difficult ever to declare
victory in a war on terrorism or terror, much less evil. We succeeded
in defeating the Taliban in Afghanistan, but that has not brought us
victory in the war on terrorism. Indeed, at the time, Americans
believed that toppling the Taliban but failing to capture bin Laden
and his aides would constitute failure. We have succeeded in severely
curtailing the freedom of operation of the al-Qaeda leadership. We
have captured many, but by no means all, of its leaders and destroyed
its command, communication, and training systems, yet this has not
brought us victory in the war on terrorism.

If victory means making the United States invulnerable to terrorist
attack, we are never, ever going to be victorious. Here's why casting
a conflict in terms of a war one cannot win is a big mistake. By
dispatching any operative into any Starbucks, subway station, or
shopping mall in the country and blowing it up, a terrorist group
could demonstrate that the most powerful country in the history fo the
world has not been able to beat it. This is making it much too easy
for the terrorists. [ . . . ]

The ultimate goal of any war must be to deny the adversary what it
is that he wants. Terrorists want to be considered at war with us, so
to concede this to them is to grant them what they want, instead of
doing our utmost to deny them what they want.

Terrorists like to be considered soldiers at war both because of
the legitimacy they believe it brings their cause and for the status
they believe it confers on them. For the United States to declare war
on a bunch of radical extremists living under the protection of an
impoverished Afghanistan is to elevate their stature in a way that
they could not possibly hope to do themselves.

Again (p. 179):

By declaring war yet refusing to be bound by the agreed constraints
on warfare and refusing to conduct the war through existing
international institutions, the United States alienated its allies and
confirmed the worst views of neutrals and adversaries. In 2001, for
example, according to a poll conducted by the Pew Research Center,
three out of four Indonesians had a positive view of the United
States. Two years later, four out of five had a negative view. A BBC
poll in summer 2003 revealed that the vast majority of Jordanians and
Indonesians considered the United States to be more dangerous than
al-Qaeda. A majority in India, Russia, South Korea, and Brazil saw the
United States as more dangerous than Iran. The U.S. government
believed that the atrocity committed against it was so great that it
could not afford to have any constraints on the exercise of its power
in response. Ironically, it was precisely the unbridled deployment of
that unrivaled power that alienated its allies, turned neutrals
against it, swelled the ranks of its adversaries and destroyed its
chances of achieving its longterm objective, that is, the containment
of the resort to terrorism.

On Bin Laden and Bush (p. 194):

In responding to the attacks of 9/11 with a declaration of war on
terror, the United States mirrored the behavior of its adversary. Bin
Laden has ignored the rich complexity and nuanced teachings of Islam
and superimposed a highly simplified, Manichean view of good and evil:
he represents the good servant of Allah; the United States represents
the infidel. In response the U.S. government adopted the same
black-and-white view of the world, only in its view it represents
goodness and he represents evil. Nowhere was this similarity more in
evidence than in the unfortunate use of the term "crusade" in
describing our war on terror. A few days after the attack, President
Bush told reporters that "This crusade, this war on terrorism, is
going to take a while." The word might have been dismissed as an
unfortunate slip of the tongue had it not been repeated in a set
speech tro the troops in Alaska some months later. In that instance,
the president said of the Canadians, "They stand with us in this
incredibly important crusade to defend freedom."

Again (p. 195):

One of the striking featuers of bin Laden's many statements is the
endless litany of grievances against the West. He never takes into
account the suffering he has inflicted on others, even of the hundreds
of innocent Africans killed and injured in the attacks on the American
Embassy in Nairobi in 1998. In our response to bin Laden, it appears
that for us, too, only our suffering, only our grievances, matter. In
fighting back at al-Qaeda, we inadvertently killed a large number of
civilians. By August 2002, the estimated number of Afghan civilian
deaths from U.S. bombings was between 3,125 and 3,620; that is,
significantly more than the number of civilians killed by al-Qaeda on
9/11. These numbers never became a topic of discussion, much less a
cause of concern, in this country. We were so taken with the extent of
our own suffering that we didn't consider the suffering we were
inflicting on others.

Under "What Is to Be Done?" Richardson offers six rules for
counteracting terrorism (pp. 203-233):

Have a Defensible and Achievable Goal

Live by Your Principles

Know Your Enemy

Separate the Terrorists from Their Communities

Engage Others in Countering Terrorists with You

Have Patience and Keep Your Perspective

These are mostly self-explanatory. Somewhere between #2 and #3
there should be a "know thyself" -- which is clearly an American
affliction. A couple of quotes from these sections. From Rule 3
(p. 213):

Wars are easier to begin than to end; they tend to last much longer
than an objective assessment of the interests of the participants
suggest that they should. The same is true of terrorism and
counterterrorist campaigns. In some cases one side has overwhelming
power and simply wins the conflict, but this is rarely the case. The
First World War, for example, ended in 1918 on terms that had
essentially been available two years earlier. The Boer War could have
ended on the same terms as it eventually did eighteen months
earlier. The IRA finally called an end to its campaign seven years
after the Good Friday Agreement, and the broad terms of that agreement
could have been available many years earlier. There are a variety of
reasons for this. The costs of wars are such that participants feel
they need to continue fighting to justify the costs already
borne. Wars and terrorist campaigns tend to be prolonged by an
unlikely alliance of hawks on both sides and generally require an
alliance of doves on both sides in order to make peace.

From Rule 4 (p. 216):

Our purpose in alienating the terrorists from their communities is
not to win a popularity contest. The reality is that the extent of our
wealth and strength will always breed resentment. We do not need to be
loved; great powers rarely are. The only threshold we need to reach is
that ordinary members of society not be prepared to support those who
wish to oppose us by killing our civilians. That is not such a high
threshold to achieve. Nevertheless, if by our actions we seem to
confirm the view of us held by the terrorists themselves, if our
behavior seems more in keeping with their account of our motives than
with our own, then we will strengthen our adversaries
immeasurably.

Again from Rule 4 (p. 219):

The fact that someone who has committed heinous crimes makes
allegations against us does not mean that those allegations are
without foundation and should be dismissed out of hand. If our
audience is the broader community to which he is appealing, then we
need to listen and to respond to the allegations. Nowhere is the gulf
between al-Qaeda's argument and ours more in evidence than in the
question of the impact of economic sanctions on Iraq. In his
statements over the years bin Laden regularly invoked the hundreds of
thousands of Iraqi children killed by American sanctions. "A million
innocent children are dying as we speak, killed in Iraq without any
guilt." Americans simply dismissed these claims as the outrageous
rantings of a diabolical fanatic. Economic sanctions, after all, are
benign; they are a means of putting pressure on a pariah government
without using force. Americans saw our sanctions as evidence of our
restraint, and if they caused hardship for Iraqi civilians it was
because Saddam Hussein was impeding their implementation in the
humanitarian way we had intended.

The fact is that the UN sanctions did cause the deaths of hundreds
of thousands of Iraqi children. A UNICEF report issued in 1999
indicated that 500,000 children under the age of five died between
1991 and 1998 in Iraq due largely to the impact of the sanctions. The
British medical journal The Lancet reported, "Infant mortality
rose from 47 per 1,000 live births during 1984-89 to 108 per 1,000 in
1994-99, and under five mortality rose from 56 to 131 per 1,000 live
births." Two successive UN officials in charge of the program resigned
to protest the humanitarian catastrophe over which they were
presiding.

One reason I quoted this book so extensively is that I was reading
a copy from the library, so don't have the book to refer to. There is
a section where she argues that a major obstacle to international law
regarding terrorism is that too many nations tend to interpret terrorism
in the context of their own political agendas. For example, the US likes
to make a distinction between "good" terrorists (the anti-Soviet Afghan
mujahideen, the anti-Sandinista contras) and "bad" terrorists (e.g.,
the anti-American Afghan mujahideen). I don't have a quote on that,
but she argues that all terrorism, given her definition, is always
terrorism. That seems right to me, but it's worth noting that that
argument leads to a pacifist position. That's alright with me, too.

But if we take the acts of terrorism as definitive, then we have
to provide some accounting for equivalent acts by the state. Such
acts are in fact contrary to human rights as commonly defined, so
it's not necessary to define them as terrorism in order to condemn
them. Moreover, it seems to me that there is a moral equivalence
between terrorism and state acts of terror, unless you want to
argue that states, by dint of their presumed responsibilities,
are even more immoral.

Another point I missed quoting is where she argues that one of
the great missed opportunities of the Bush War on Terror was how it
failed to consolidate near-universal outrage over the 9/11 attacks
into a great strengthening of international law over terrorism.
This didn't happen primarily because Bush et al., as rulers of the
world's presumed sole hyperpower, intended to settle all scores on
its own. That this sounds like something from a Mafia opera isn't
coincidental. Bush isn't merely the ruler of a rogue nation; he's
the scion of one of the world's great crime families.

Music: Current count 12602 [12577] rated (+25), 890 [892] unrated (-2).
Mostly Recycled Goods this week, with scattered bouts of jazz prospecting
just to make sure I don't come up empty. Recycled Goods is currently at
57 records, which is more than enough, but I still want to squeeze the
Clash singles in, and I suppose it's now or never for that Johnny Mathis
Xmas collection. A couple more days should do it. January's column will
be a year-end wrap-up, which as of yet I'm pretty unprepared for.

African Head Charge: Off the Beaten Track (1986 [2006],
Anthology): Based in London, Bongo Iyabinghi Noah's group stripped dub
to its echo chamber and mechanistic beats, folding in instruments and
chants without adding any complexity; while referring back to the most
African music Jamaica has to offer, such roots aren't grounded --
producer Adrian Sherwood done ripped them up.
A-

African Head Charge: In Pursuit of Shashamane Land
(1994, On-U Sound/Restless): Similar beats and vamps, but more texture,
as if they thought they were expected to develop. B+

China Shop: 21 Puffs on the Cassette (1979-91 [2006],
Anthology): An early postpunk band, frequented CBGB's in the early '80s,
released a 4-song EP in 1983, broke up, regrouped, went nowhere much;
not negative enough for no wave, not positive enough to leave much of
an impression; this collects scraps from eight undated sessions, some
prog, some new wave, not bad, but not much.
B-

The Klezmatics: Woody Guthrie's Happy Joyous Hanukkah
(2006, JMG): The lyrics, some didactic and some delirious, all date
from 1949, when the Okie folksinger made his home in Jewish Brooklyn;
the music is new, even happier and more joyous than the lyrics, with
a few new instrumentals slipped in, like "(Do the) Latke Flip."
B+(*)

Moondog: Demos (1989 [2006], Anthology): This is
ex-Gorilla Biscuits, future Quicksand singer Walter Schreifels, not
the eccentric and comparatively famous Louis Hardin, engaged in
relatively listenable hardcore thrash; these were unreleased demos,
seven songs, not much more than two minutes each, and my advance
doesn't match what they're peddling on the website.
B-

My Solid Ground (1971 [2006], Anthology): Early
kraut rock -- so early it's not recognizable as such, aside from
the fact that the musicians are German, and the instrumental first
cut sort of points the way toward Can; with vocals they loosely
fit into art rock, metal division.
B

Pärson Sound (1966-68 [2006], Anthology, 2CD):
Mostly instrumental, built from thick layers of guitar, cello
and sax with hard rock beats punctuating dirgelike repetitive
drones -- at its lightest just guitar over bird twitter; mistaken
for psychedelia at the time, this owes more to LaMonte Young,
parallels the Velvet Underground and Soft Machine, and runs far
ahead of hardcore bands like Flipper, but sounds to me most
like a jazz fusion road not taken.
A-

Sainte Anthony's Fyre (1971 [2006], Anthology):
A rough and fuzzy hard rock power trio from Trenton NJ, packaged
at the time as psychedelia because grunge hadn't been conceived.
B+(*)

The Suicide Commandos: The Commandos Commit Suicide Dance
Concert ([2006], Anthology): Punk from Minneapolis,
which seems to mean polite and well-schooled, down to respectful
covers of Chuck Berry and the Animals, as well as crude thrash
over unformed hooks.
B

Stoll Vaughan: Love Like a Mule (2006, Shadow Dog):
Alt-country singer-songwriter, plays guitar and harmonica like Dylan,
and on occasion sings like him. Writes smart songs. I've read nothing
about him, so this is well above expectations.
B+(***)

Hank Williams III: Straight to Hell (2006, Bruc, 2CD):
"I'm here to put the dick in Dixie/and the cunt back in Country." Can't
quote that in F5, so I wrote this instead: He's got his grandpa's pipes
and his dad's gonads and he's got more attitude than either. He has big
plans for Dixie, and, well, you can guess what part of country he likes --
sure ain't the pop stuff, nor frauds like Kid Rock. Despite all his proud
habits and vices, he's managed to live longer than his namesake. Maybe
guilt's the worst killer of all? He's safe on that score. Second disc
is his rambling redneck revision of Pink Floyd's Atom Heart Mother.
A-

Jazz Prospecting (CG #12, Part 2)

Nothing new to report on the still unpublished 11th Jazz Consumer
Guide. I still expect the Voice will publish it in early December,
but don't have a date, and haven't seen the promised edit. I've
mostly been working on December's Recycled Goods column, so not a
lot to report below. I'm looking at a few more days of that, then
I guess the next thing is to think of year-end lists. At present,
my 2006 list has 82 A-records,
that is still well short of 2005's
133. No doubt I'm way behind on non-jazz at this point. Some of
this I can blame on the Voice's firing of Robert Christgau, whose
Consumer Guide has been MIA since July. This will change shortly:
Christgau has a deal with MSN Music to publish a bimonthly CG,
and the first one will be posted shortly after December 1. I'll
have more details later this week, as will Christgau's
website once I get
an update together.

My January Recycled Goods column will be a year-end review, so
sometime in the next four weeks I need to get a much better handle
on what I've missed thus far. I'd welcome any lists-in-progress
that readers have, and may try to compile them into some kind of
metacritic summary. Francis Davis has decided to conduct his own
year-end jazz poll which he'll work into his Voice column. That
one is due Dec. 13, and will survey 40 NYC-centered critics. I'll
post my ballot when I get it together, but looking at my working
list, the top ten run from Ornette Coleman to Nik Bärtsch's Ronin
or Joe Morris depending on whether Steve Lacy is new or old, with
Steven Bernstein and Vandermark 5 just off the cusp.

The other poll I'm likely to contribute to is the Voice's first
post-Christgau Pazz & Jop tally. It will be strange this time
around.

Pärson Sound (1966-68 [2006], Anthology, 2CD):
Well, actually this isn't a CD, let alone two, at all. Anthology
Recordings is a label that only sells downloads -- I just happen
to have gotten the album on two CDs because the publicist figured
(correctly in my case) that some of us would only respond to CDs.
I don't like the business model. I've never paid for mere bits,
and doubt that I ever will. On the other hand, I mention this
here because it is sort-of jazzlike -- mostly instrumental, with
saxophones in the lead -- and because it's pretty good. Mostly
instrumental, built from thick layers of guitar, cello and sax
with hard rock beats punctuating dirgelike repetitive drones -- at
its lightest just guitar over bird twitter; mistaken for psychedelia
at the time, this owes more to LaMonte Young, parallels the Velvet
Underground and Soft Machine, and runs far ahead of hardcore bands
like Flipper, but sounds to me most like a jazz fusion road not
taken. (Looks like it's still in print in Sweden on Subliminal
Sounds. More on Anthology in the next Recycled Goods, due early
December.)
A-

Bill Anschell: More to the Ear Than Meets the Eye
Seattle-based pianist, worked with Nnenna Freelon for several years,
has several albums under his own name, dating back to 1994. This
one, a mix of five standards and six originals, is built around two
trios, with sax or trumpet added on half. Elegant postbop, flowing
piano, horns a mixed blessing.
B+(*)

Liam Sillery With the David Sills Quartet: On the Fly
(2005 [2006], OA2): Sills is a mainstream tenor saxophonist, who did
an album earlier this year that I rather liked (Down the Line).
His quartet includes organ and guitar, so it takes off from soul jazz
mainstream. Sillery plays trumpet and flugelhorn. Sax-trumpet quintets
normally spell hard bop, but the bottom is weak here, and the top is
rather flighty, the horns harmonizing more than dicing. The result is
a sort of elegant postbop I find almost totally uninteresting.
B-

Phil Kelly & the SW Santa Ana Winds: My Museum
(2006, Origin): Los Angeles-based big band, including a bank of strings
and some featured soloists of note -- Wayne Begeron, Pete Christlieb,
Bill Cunliffe, Grant Geissman, Jay Thomas are names I recognize. Kelly
wrote five of nine pieces and arranged the rest, including "Body &
Soul" and "Daydream." Kelly has also worked with a Seattle-based group
called the Northwest Prevailing Winds. Nicely done, with some inspired
moments, but sometimes I wonder why anyone puts so much effort into
projects of such limited potential.
B

JC and the Jazz Hoppers: Chillin' at Home (2004 [2006],
Jazz-Hop): JC is Jason Campbell, guitarist. The Jazz Hoppers are Colin
Nolan and Andrew Dickeson, who play organ and drums, respectively. Don't
know anything about Campbell -- his website has Flash but no substance --
but the record was recorded in Australia, which isn't what you'd call
an international jazz destination. So, guitar-organ-drums: been done.
Chillin'? That too. Sounds like Grant Green? Sort of, but if that's
the point, not enough.
B-

Mike Marshall/Hamilton de Holanda: New Worlds/Novas Palavras
(2005 [2006], Adventure Music, CD+DVD): Mandolins aren't exactly choice
dueling instruments, but the point here is more likely to see what can
come together than how American and Brazilian mandolinists stack up. The
match isn't exactly equal: de Holanda plays 10-string bandolim and Irish
bouzouki, both close matches to Marshall's mandolin. Marshall also drops
down a bit with mandocello and tenor guitar. This struck me as the label
owner's indulgence at first, but it works better than expected. Sounds
to my ears somewhat like one of those plucky mediaeval dance things, but
more tightly wound -- a plus. DVD has three songs: that's the owner's
indulgence, but he wants you to see how happy he is.
B+(*)

The Microscopic Septet: Seven Men in Neckties: History of the
Micros Volume One (1982-90 [2006], Cuneiform, 2CD): Breakdown
here is four saxes, piano, bass (or tuba), drums. Soprano saxophonist
Phillip Johnston, most recently heard from in the Captain Beefheart
tribute band Fast 'N' Bulbous (also on Cuneiform), is the evident
leader, although pianist Joel Forrester writes nearly as much. Dave
Sewelson (baritone sax), David Hofstra (bass, tuba), and Richard
Dworkin (drums) were constants, with the alto and tenor sax chairs
revolving over ten years and four albums. This collects their first
two albums: Take the Z Train (1983) and the live Let's
Flip (1985), with a few extra tracks thrown in, including a
brief take of Forrester's theme for NPR's Fresh Air. Hard
to know what to make of this: it's basically swing done by NYC's
downtown fringe without any obviously ironic affectations -- sort
of the premillennial version of Steven Bernstein's Millennial
Territory Orchestra. Live record gets dicier. They can approach
the marvelous at times, but don't make a habit of it.
[B+(**)]

The Microscopic Septet: Surrealistic Swing: History of
the Micros Volume Two (1981-90 [2006], Cuneiform, 2CD):
Two more albums -- Off Beat Glory (1986) and Beauty
Based on Science (The Visit) (1988) -- and they're done,
with a couple of cuts from an early session with John Zorn and
John Hagen and more "Fresh Air Theme" stretching the dates.
Offhand, I'd say the 1986 album slips a notch, but the 1988
one makes up the lost ground. Thought I heard an attractive
tango on the latter, but the title claims it's a waltz. Oh,
well.
[B+(**)]

Frank Wright: Unity (1974 [2006], ESP-Disk):
Wright's a tenor saxophonist from Albert Ayler's generation -- he
had a year on Ayler, two on Archie Shepp, five on Pharoah Sanders.
He started in r&b bands before leaping to the avant fringe.
Didn't record much -- a couple of mid-'60s albums on ESP, a 1970
Free America album, a bit with Cecil Taylor in the '80s. One I
like a lot is Last Set, a live set from 1984 under Raphe
Malik's name that just appeared a couple of years ago. This seems
to be another live discovery: a quartet from the Moers Festival
with Bobby Few on piano, Alan Silva on bass, and a drummer I don't
recognize named Muhammad Ali. Two pieces -- one 27:28, the other
29:00 -- with the usual solo shots, but Wright is a power house,
Few and Silva have strong moments, and they all hit a groove at
end end that really rocks the house.
[B+(***)]

Cheryl Bentyne: The Book of Love (2006, Telarc):
She's enough of a pro that she delivers a perfectly good rendition
of perfectly good songs -- a "You Don't Know Me," a "Cry Me a
River," anything by Cole Porter. But she's not great enough to
get anything out of a song that isn't already there, and the
musicians aren't any help at all -- least of all the City of
Prague Symphony Orchestra Strings, who might as well serenade
Brezhnev. And the title cut gets turned to ethereal fluff by
Take 6. Twice. Concepts aren't a strong suit either.
C-

And these are final grades/notes on records I put back for further
listening the first time around.

Bridge 61: Journal (2005 [2006], Atavistic): You
know about Ken Vandermark, Nate McBride, and Tim Daisy by now. The
fourth wheel here is Jason Stein on bass clarinet -- Vandermark
plays tenor sax, baritone sax, and clarinet. He was born 1976,
grew up on Long Island, bounced around through Central America
and Montana and Vermont and Michigan and wound up in Chicago.
I'm not so sure what he's doing here. This is advertised as an
evenly balanced cooperative, but the distribution of compositions
is: Vandermark 4, McBride 2, Daisy 2, Stein 0. I don't hear much
that sounds like bass clarinet either -- a couple of muffled solos,
a fair amount of comping. As for the others, Daisy and McBride
continue to develop, and Vandermark closes with a very strong
piece for Sonny Sharrock.
B+(*)

Sound in Action Trio: Gate (2003 [2006], Atavistic):
Two drummers: Robert Barry, from Sun Ra Arkestra, and Tim Daisy, from
Triage and numerous Ken Vandermark projects, including the flagship
5. One horn, Vandermark, constantly on the spot. Half originals, all
dedicated to drummers; half modern jazz pieces, with Dolphy offering
a clarinet feature, and Coltrane setting up some extraordinary tenor
sax.
A-

Mike Holober: Wish List (2004-05 [2006], Sons of
Sound): I don't get the sense that Holober is an exceptional pianist,
but I have noticed that he often shows up in good places, and that
he is one of the main factors in that success. That may mean he's
a better follower than leader. That this record makes such a soft
impression may be that his lead players never take charge. Tim
Rees adds little more than color with his saxophones; Wolfgang
Muthspiel is even more evanescent on guitar.
B

F5 Record Report (#17: November 23, 2006)

Probably due to the Thanksgiving holiday, this week's F5 Record
Report hasn't been posted yet. The usual
link will
probably work sooner or later. Meanwhile, you can find my draft
here. This one was
another rush job, in this case occasioned by an early deadline,
so I rumaged through the recyclings. The lineup is:

Figured we might as well kick off the shopping season with some good
records. Two more anomalies are: only six records, which is the bottom
end of my 6-8 target range, and only three labels, all majors.

Turned another column in, this one with some new stuff. Should
have posted this on Friday at the usual time, since I have no more to
report now. But I've been laid low by the holiday weekend as well --
fixed salmon teriyaki and various Japanese-themed dishes Thursday,
and more to round out the leftovers on Friday, but that was about all
the energy I could muster.

Letter to publicists:

This week's F5 Record Report presumably has a record of interest to
you. F5 is a weekly entertainment tabloid distributed free here in
Wichita KS. I cover 6-8 records per week, sometimes recycling from
other columns. The following URL will get you the latest column,
and the "next article" links will cycle you back in time.
http://www.f5wichita.com/mba.php?id=55
For more info, see:
http://tomhull.com/ocston/music.php
The index by label:
EMI (Blue Note): Serge Chaloff
Sony/BMG (Legacy): Waylon Jennings, Fats Waller
Universal: Buddy Holly, Jerry Lee Lewis, Muddy Waters
Thanks for your interest and support.

An End to Hunger

Saw this in the Wichita Eagle today, from Elizabeth Williamson of
the Washington Post:

It's Thanksgiving, a week sine the U.S. Department of Agriculture
released its annual hunger -- er, food security -- report, and it's
likely that a few folks in the department are ready for a holiday
break.

For the first time, the USDA's annual report on Americans' access
to food omitted the word "hunger" in describing the condition of 11
million people who at times can't afford to feed themselves. These
people, among a group of 35 million who had trouble keeping food on
the table at least part of last year, shall heretofore, according to
the government, be described as experiencing "very low food
security."

This is a relatively trivial example, but reminds us that for
the Bush administration, all problems are PR problems, and the
only thing it ever takes to fix them is better PR.

On the other hand, I'm not sure that hunger is the right term.
Everyone gets hungry, but most of us have little or no trouble
finding some kind of food. What we're talking about is persistent
hunger, but is the sensation there still hunger? Or is it more
like malnutrition? Hunger is a message from your stomach saying
fill me up. That's very straightforward, whereas malnutrition
doesn't have such an unambiguous signal: your body feels weak,
deprived, damaged, but it's harder to tell why or how. That's
probably the real problem, but it's a more complicated one: a
combination of "low food security," miseducation, possibly a
shortfall of motivation, and inadequate health care. Reducing
all that down to "hunger" causes a disconnect with most Americans,
who are more likely to have a problem with too much food than
with too little. And who, if they're at all fortunate, take the
rest of the equation for granted.

On the other hand, there's no reason to doubt that the PR
solution is politically motivated. That's the Bush solution to
everything.

Late Movies

The Wichita Eagle has a little feature every Tuesday listing select
new DVD releases. Seems a strange sense of priorities that they don't
do anything similar for CD releases, but never mind. The thing that
struck me today was that two of the movies I've seen but haven't gotten
around to noting here are now out on DVD. I don't see a lot of movies,
but I haven't written anything in this slot since July 21. So at least
I need to stub this, even if I don't have much to say.

Movie: An Inconvenient Truth. In the end, Al Gore
reminded me why I like him so little, but also impressed me with an
earnestness lacking in other patrician politicians we can name --
more so in reference to the world than in terms of his own ego. The
images are particularly striking. The science seems sound, and the
facts accumulate. I have a friend who saw this and started making
plans to leave the country. Evidently, he's not betting that we'll
take Gore's remedies to heart. Or that they'll work.
A-

Movie: The Devil Wore Prada. More entertaining
than it has any right to be.
B+

Movie: Scoop. Back to funny movies, even if Allen's
not done with Britain's tiresome upper crust.
A-

Movie: Little Miss Sunshine. Spent too much of the
movie wanting it to move differently. In retrospect, all those
missteps seems to work out anyway.
A-

Movie: The Illusionist. Makes me think we could do
with more movies about the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and fewer about
magicians.
B

Movie: The Black Dahlia. Not just overdetermined;
downright overresolved. Thought the two female leads were miscast,
but the boxer-cops did well enough.
B

Movie: The Departed. Another case where the plot
was problematic -- especially the extreme body count at the end.
But near great, especially Leonardo DiCaprio, who had the toughest
role.
A-

Movie: Half Nelson. The big problem with drugs is
watching other people on them, especially in movies. Couldn't much
relate to the dialectics nonsense either, but there is a payoff in
the end.
B+

Movie: Infamous. The box office loser of the
Capote sweepstakes -- gayer and weirder, but slightly off. The
New York social trivia is more fun than Capote, perhaps
because it plays up the artifice; but that approach is rough on
Kansas, especially given the harsh light and rough surfaces given
the killers. Sandra Bullock is fine, but Catherine Keener is a
natural; Toby Miller matches Capotes physically, but Hoffman
gets the anguish right. So acting wins out.
B+

Movie: Catch a Fire. After the Americans in
Iraq, the biggest surprise is how good South Africa's intelligence
was on this case. Not so surprising is that it didn't matter.
B+

Movie: Marie Antoinette. The ahistorical music
and attitude was expected, but the most striking thing was how
the set overwhelmed the story. It's like the rare opportunity
to shoot in Versailles demanded such deferential treatment.
B

Movie: The Queen. This makes two Elizabeths for
Helen Mirren, neither worthy of Prime Suspect.
B+

News of Robert Altman's death today. His A Prairie Home
Companion is still my top movie this year.

Music: Current count 12577 [12557] rated (+20), 892 [889] unrated (+1).
Still decompressing, but I had a number of box sets awaiting my attention,
so I figured this would be a good week. It used to be that when I would
write something for Recycled Goods I would just copy it here, but I've
been getting sloppy about doing that. Jazz prospecting has resumed.
Recycled Goods is in pretty good shape for December, but I need to get
to those Anthology download specials for my "in series." Haven't given
much thought to year-end yet. Got mostly caught up with my cataloguing,
but not quite. Seems like mail has been sparse, but I'm still having
trouble keeping up.

The Byrds: There Is a Season (1964-90 [2006],
Columbia/Legacy, 4CD+DVD):
After demos as the Jet Set and the Beefeaters,
they did a makeover as America's answer to the Beatles, all the way
down to the clever misspelling. For songs, producer Terry Melcher
tapped Bob Dylan and Pete Seeger, inadvertently inventing folk-rock.
The group gradually became self-sufficient, tracking the Beatles
through sitars and psychedelia, improbably knocking out a dozen or
so indelible hits. When David Crosby left to launch his supergroup,
Roger McGuinn hired Gram Parsons and came out way ahead, getting
credit for inventing country-rock too. When Parsons left for the
Flying Burrito Brothers, McGuinn trudged on, leaving a couple more
instances of inspired schlock. They were done by 1973, aside from
a brief 1990 reunion to pad out a 4-CD box set -- one track here,
once again hauling water for Dylan. This second generation box adds
more than it loses, but nothing essential either way. The best you
can say is that it works better as a general history, even if most
of what you learn is how dull they were live -- a short DVD of
their early TV spots show you where shoegazing came from.
B+(*)

Buddy Guy: Can't Quit the Blues (1957-2005 [2006],
Silvertone/Legacy, 3CD): He moved up to Chicago from Louisiana
in 1957, a young man with a guitar, but a latecomer to the scene.
It took him a while to click -- there's nothing all that original
in what he does, but blues is an old man's game, and he got stronger
as the competition died off. This dispatches 25 years with one disc,
limiting frequent partner Junior Wells to five cuts, then fills up
two more with recent stuff starting from 1991. That doesn't make
this a very well balanced career retrospective, but it never stops
for such niceties. Individually, his Silvertone albums seem like
more and more of the same old, same old, but packed together they
deliver quite a punch.
A-

Roy Orbison: Lonely and Blue (1960 [2006],
Monument/Legacy): Unusual for a major label to reissue albums for
singles artists from the pre-Beatles era. LPs were strictly hits
plus filler. The hits here were: "Only the Lonely," "Blue Angel,"
and "I'm Hurtin'"; the filler includes two Don Gibson songs,
a lot of icky strings and slinky percussion; the bonus tracks
include one called "Pretty One" which points clearly to the
great one to follow. B

Chris Smither: Leave the Light On (Signature Sounds):
The veteran folksinger's got it all figured out: "Charlie Darwin looked
so far into the way things are/He caught a glimpse of God's unfolding
plan/God said 'I'll make some DNA, they'll use it any way they want/From
paramecium right up to man/They'll have sex, and mix up sections of
their code; they'll have mutations/The whole thing works like clockwork
over time/I'll just sit back in the shade while everyone gets laid/That's
what I call intelligent design." B+(***)

Jazz Prospecting (CG #12, Part 1)

Don't have a schedule yet for when the Village Voice will publish
my 11th Jazz Consumer Guide -- understand the editor there is busy
through Thanksgiving, but will get back to me with an edit. Early
December seems likely. Meanwhile, we'll start prospecting for #12,
even though I'm still decompressing. Spent most of last week on a
pile of box sets, mostly from Sony/BMG. The Buddy Guy and Waylon
Jennings are low A-. I'm not a big fan of either, but they gain
through accumulation.

John Bunch: At the Nola Penthouse: Salutes Jimmy Van Heusen
(2006, Arbors): The label likes to do these double titles. I'm following
the spine, except for adding a colon. Doesn't read right to me, but don't
know what else to do. The subject for both clauses is pianist Bunch, who
will turn 85 later this year. He's been a dependable name for a long time
now. Follows in Teddy Wilson's footsteps, and doesn't wander far from
there. Dave Green and Steve Brown complete the trio, neither making much
of an impression. Nor does Bunch, really -- this is quiet and respectful,
lovely when you focus, but a bit too modest to listen to.
B

George Colligan Trio: Blood Pressure (2006, Ultimatum):
Trio suggests a group with a fixed lineup, which isn't the case here.
Josh Ginsberg is replaced or joined on bass by Boris Kozlov. Jonathan
Blake yields the drumset to EJ Strickland and Vanderlai Pereira. Two
more cuts have extras: Jamie Baum's flute on one, Meg Okura's violin
on the other. Colligan plays synths as well as piano, so there are
various electronic blips as well as the usual soft tones. I find it
all very confusing, although the straight acoustic piano trio is
superb, as usual, and the other stuff is interesting. One thing
that is clear is the message to "Mr. Cheney" in the tray photo.
B+(*)

Sonny Stitt: Stitt's Bits: The Bebop Recordings,
1949-1952 ([2006], Prestige, 3CD): Stitt always claimed
that he developed his style independently of Charlie Parker, sort
of like Alfred Russel Wallace's discovery of Charles Darwin's
theory of natural selection. But Parker was four years older, got
his records out first, and established his case more persuasively.
Stitt's early records on Prestige came out when bebop was in full
swing -- indeed, Jay Jay Johnson headlined the first set here,
and Bud Powell co-led the second. And as he moved from tenor sax
to alto, he almost begged comparison to Bird. More than anything
else, Stitt was a working musician -- a guy who cranked
out hundreds of albums, often on the flimsiest of premises. Most
of the sessions here were jousts with Gene Ammons, and the best
are when they're both flying high. But including everything drags
their faint r&b vocal sides in.
B+(**)

Weather Report: Forecast: Tomorrow (1969-85 [2006],
Columbia/Legacy, 3CD+DVD): The jazz-rock fusion of the early '70s was
less a movement than a family franchise. It started with Miles Davis,
then spread with his departing employees: most importantly, John
McLaughlin, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, and this Wayne Shorter-Joe
Zawinul joint venture. Hardly anyone without a connection to Davis
mattered, but the preponderance of keyboards set the music adrift --
the rhythms and textures thickening, the atmosphere clouding up. At
least that's what I always thought, but this box had me wondering
for a while. The first disc gets a running start by including three
pre-group cuts, starting with the Davis take of Zawinul's "In a
Silent Way." Then it leans heavily on the first album and live cuts
where the jazz whiskers come out. But it gets spottier as they go
on, especially when Shorter tries to fit in rather than stand out.
The DVD offers a 1978 concert at the band's popular peak with Jaco
Pastorius and Peter Erskine going shirtless in what must be a Cheap
Trick homage.
B+(**)

Janice Borla: From Every Angle (2006, Blujazz):
Jazz singer from Chicago. Her website lists three albums over the
last ten years, but also mentions a first album (Whatever We
Imagine) that dates back at least 20, as does her "leading
role in vocal jazz education." She's not a cabaret singer -- the
songs here come from the bop era with assists from Jon Hendricks
and Bobby McFerrin. She can scat. She gets respectful, tasteful
backup. In fact, this is expert enough that I feel kind of bad
that I don't respond to it more. Professionalism doesn't come
easy. Nor does reviewing it.
B

Dominique Eade/Jed Wilson: Open (2004-05 [2006],
Jazz Project): Jazz singer, teamed here in minimal duets with
pianist Wilson. She has a USAF father, Swiss mother, born London,
grew up mostly in Germany; attended Vassar, Berklee, New England
Conservatory, the latter keeping her on to teach. Five albums,
including a tribute to June Christy and Chris Connor. Writes
most of the songs here, although Leonard Cohen's "In My Secret
Life" is the one that stands out. Way too spartan for my taste,
but striking nonetheless.
B+(*)

Diane Delin: Offerings for a Peaceable Season
(2005 [2006], Blujazz): Violinist with five albums going back
to 1997. Don't know anything more, but clearly she's fond of
Grappelli. Starts off with "My Favorite Things" and "Baby It's
Cold Outside" before toppling into unavoidable Xmas songs,
recasting the meaning of those not normally so tainted. By
the end of the year this rant is likely to get old, but I
have no interest whatsoever in holiday music. Didn't even
like it before I read the factoid that it outsells jazz.
This one snuck in on the peace train, so I'll let it off
with a mild reprimand. The others I'm saving for a real bah
humbug day.
B-

Muhal Richard Abrams/George Lewis/Roscoe Mitchell:
Streaming (2005 [2006], Pi): These guys look serious
in the booklet photos -- only Abrams manages to crack a smile,
and then only when he isn't working. Lewis plays enough trombone
to remind you how much you wish he'd play more, but his main
instrument these days is laptop -- presumably the source of the
hums and buzzes, not to mention the birdsong effects. Mitchell
is probably responsible for most of the percussion, even though
his first credits are soprano and alto sax. Still, Abrams is
the center here, the reason for this universe's existence. This
reminds me of his early work. The toys are different, but the
creative impulse is the same.
[B+(***)]

Sonic Liberation Front: Change Over Time (2006,
High Two): This follows the same lines, and has many of the same
wonders, as the their two previous albums, including my fave from
2004, Ashé a Go-Go. But it hasn't quite kicked in yet --
not sure what it is, but I don't get the same rise from the sax,
and the vocal pieces don't take on unexpected lives. That leaves
the bata drums, which may still be the point.
[B+(***)]

And these are final grades/notes on records I put back for further
listening the first time around.

Al Di Meola: Consequence of Chaos (2006, Telarc):
Fusion guitarist from New Jersey. Made his reputation in Chick
Corea's Return to Forever, with Corea returning the favor here.
Some of this is pleasantly grooveful. Some is sparely elegant.
Some of it is Corea-style fusion.
B

Saborit: Que Linda Es Mi Cuba (2006, Tumi Music):
I suppose it's pure coincidence that the guitars in this East
Cuban group remind me of nothing so much as Guitar Paradise
of East Africa. Cuba's Oriente is typically less Afro and
more Spanish than the urban jungle of Havana, but for country
music this builds on pretty complex riddims. Modestly named for
guaracha legend Eduardo Saborit, they've played together for
twenty-plus years before piling onto a tractor and heading
cross-country for their first studio date. That may make them
hicks, but they were right to take the chance.
A-

Stanton Moore: III (2006, Telarc): Not sure
what you'd call Moore's strain of jazz-funk fusion. It shares
some ground with MM&W, looking back to soul jazz organ
(Robert Walter is the guy here), guitar (Will Bernard), and
sax (Skerik). Garage A Trois's Outre Mer, which Moore
had a big hand in, is my favorite example -- it just seems
to click together right. This is spottier, especially on the
more straightforward funk toons. Two slower pieces toward the
end -- Abdullah Ibrahim's "Water From an Ancient Well" and
trad.'s "I Shall Not Be Moved" -- are exceptional, curiously
sandwiched around a Led Zep blues, "When the Levee Breaks."
B+(*)

Towers of Hanoi

Not being a news junkie, and not being able to stomach more than
a few nanoseconds of the Bush administration bigwigs at a time, I've
only picked up fragmentary reports on the Dauphin's visit to Vietnam.
(Sorry, just saw Marie Antoinette and The Queen this
weekend, so the stunted progeny of royalty are fresh on my mind.)
I've been looking for a coherent summary, but haven't found one
yet. (Seems like this one's right up Tom Engelhardt's alley.) Part
of the reason has got to be that the whole thing is strange beyond
belief -- even before Condoleezza Rice went on record urging the
Iraqis to follow Vietnam's example. One thing we know, even if it
seems incredible, is that neocon America has memories of Vietnam
so bizarre you have to wonder if they've been implanted in some
supersecret CIA program. Bush clings to the notion that the only
reason the US lost in Vietnam was that we quit the fight -- an
analogy he likes to make to Iraq, even though the corrolary is
that if we hadn't quit we'd still be fighting in Vietnam. That
such distortions persist in the neocon mind is a big part of the
reason they marched so blindly into Iraq. But after several years
of trying to deny similarities between Iraq and Vietnam, it's
especially disturbing that now they find hope in that analogy.

Still, this leaves open the question of why they went to Vietnam
in the first place. The only idea I can come up with is that someone
figured it might be useful to show Bush that surrendering might not
turn out so bad in the long run. But clearly the point is lost on
him. One report is that he toured a memorial to victims of the US
bombing of Hanoi, and responded that it was one-sided. Well, of
course, there are two sides: those who are bombed rarely look at
it the same way as those who drop the bombs. On the other hand,
it's a bit like complaining that the future 9/11 memorial doesn't
have a wing explaining Bin Laden's side of the story.

Self-Hating Jews

United States President George Bush was informed on Tuesday of an
initiative to establish a center under his name in Israel, as a sign
of gratitude for his support for the country and its security.

Outgoing Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Daniel Ayalon asked Bush
for the go-ahead to establish such a center during a farewell meeting
with the president and his deputy, Dick Cheney.

Bush told Ayalon that "freedom" would be a worthy subject for the
center to focus on.

We're already seeing signs of the bloodletting to come on the
far fringes of the US right as they seek to distance themselves
from Bush. Before building a monument to the man, it might be a
good idea to see how far he's likely to sink. Israelis are usually
much shrewder at reading American public opinion -- especially
given that American Jews voted against Bush's party in 2006 by
a 6-to-1 margin.

Moreover, it's far from clear that Bush's obeisance to Israel's
diehard hawks will be regarded as much of a favor in the long term.
Even in the short term, it's not like Bush's support gave them much
comfort in Lebanon, or that either is likely to get much satisfaction
from their sabre rattling over Iran. More than ever I'm struck by how
far some Israelis have turned their backs on decency. They show us
who the real self-haters are.

F5 Record Report (#16: November 16, 2006)

This week's F5 Record Report made it to the website. Find it
with the usual
link. Only
cribbed one review from a previous column this time. Thought I
needed some jazz, which I'm on some sort of break from, and I
thought WSQ could use another plug. The lineup is:

Archie Bronson Outfit: Derdang Derdang (Domino) B [rock]

Kimya Dawson: Remember That I Love You (K) B+ [folk]

The Handsome Family: Last Days of Wonder (Carrot Top) A- [rock]

Hazmat Modine: Bahamut (Barbès): A- [world]

Andy Fairweather Low: Sweet Soulful Music (Proper) B+ [rock]

Spady: The Long Way Around and Other Short Stories (Post Script) B [country]

World Saxophone Quartet: Political Blues (Justin Time): A [jazz]

Next week's column had to be handed in early for Thanksgiving. I've
been playing box sets this week -- unproductive in terms of pumping up
my rated count, but I try to deal with what I get, and Legacy's been
pretty generous lately. Figured I finally had the time, then got caught
short, so next week's F5 column is all oldies, all A- or above. As
anyone who's studied statistics knows, it only evens out in the end,
more or less.

Letter to publicists:

This week's F5 Record Report presumably has a record of interest to
you. F5 is a weekly entertainment tabloid distributed free here in
Wichita KS. I cover 6-8 records per week, sometimes recycling from
other columns. The following URL will get you the latest column,
and the "next article" links will cycle you back in time.
http://www.f5wichita.com/mba.php?id=55
For more info, see:
http://tomhull.com/ocston/music.php
The index by label:
Barbes: Hazmat Modine
Carrot Top: The Handsome Family
Domino: Archie Bronson Outfit
Justin Time: World Saxophone Quartet
K: Kimya Dawson
Post Script: Spady
Proper: Andy Fairweather Low
Thanks for your interest and support.

What Terrorists Want

In my post-9/11 reading, I've skipped past virtually every one
of the dozens of books on terrorists and counterterrorism -- partial
exceptions are Michael Scheuer's Hubris and Ron Suskind's
The One Percent Doctrine, both about the CIA operations and
views, and Gilles Kepel's books on political Islam, Jihad: The
Trail of Political Islam and The War for Muslim Minds: Islam
and the West. The books I picked provide the broader context in
which the War on Terrorism occurs. The terrorists themselves don't
much interest me, and further abstraction of the concept strikes me
as wrong-headed.

On the other hand, Louise Richardson's What Terrorists Want:
Understanding the Enemy, Containing the Threat strikes me as an
exceptionally level-headed comparative survey and analysis of the
subject. I've only glanced through it, but Max Rodenbeck has a
review at New
York Review of Books which summarizes the book rather rigorously.
Rodenbeck reduces her book to a dozen points. I'm going to reduce
them even further here (bold quotes from Rodenbeck; mostly there
were followed with historical examples):

Terrorism is anything but new.

Terrorism is obviously a threat, and the deliberate killing
of innocent civilians an outrage, but it is not a very big
threat.

The danger from terrorist use of so-called weapons of mass
destruction is not as large as scaremongers profess.

Many terrorists are not madmen. The choice to use terror can
be quite rational and calculated.

Groups that commit terrorism, in many cases, believe they
are acting defensively, using the most effective means at their
disposal.

Suicide attacks can also represent a rational policy
choice. They are cheap. They can be a means of access to difficult
targets. They are effective in frightening people, and in advertising
the seriousness and devotion of those who undertake them.

There is no special link between Islam and terrorism. Most
major religions have produced some form of terrorism, and many
terrorist groups have professed atheism.

Electoral democracy does not prevent terrorism, which has
flourished in many democracies, typically being used by groups
representing minorities who believe the logic of majority rule
excludes them.

Democratic principles are no impediment to prosecuting
terrorists.

Military action is sometimes necessary to combat terrorism,
but it is often not the best way to do so.

Armies, in fact, often create more problems than they
solve.

To address the issues terrorists say they are fighting for
cannot automatically be dismissed as appeasement.

Richardson draws on examples as far back as the Jewish Zealots who
opposed the Roman Empire and draws from a wide range of examples,
including the Irish IRA she grew up with and was attracted to. As
far as I know, She doesn't discuss much the causes claimed by the
various groups who resort to terror, which leads her to generalize.
However, her discussion of counterterrorists focuses sharply on the
Bush administration's response to 9/11. Rodenbeck writes:

Because terrorists tend to be aspirational rather than practical,
their practices typically amount to what Ms. Richardson calls a search
for the three R's of terrorism: revenge, renown, and reaction. As she
puts it, "the point of terrorism is not to defeat the enemy but to
send a message." This simple insight is important, because it suggests
ways of dealing with terrorism: you must blunt the impulse for
revenge, try to limit the terrorists' renown, and refrain from
reacting in ways that either broaden the terrorists' appeal or
encourage further terrorism by showing how effective their tactics
are.

Richardson's three R's go a long way toward explaining why American
policy has become so disastrously askew. As she notes, an act such as
September 11 itself achieves the first of her three R's, revenge. So
spectacularly destructive an attack also gains much of the second
objective, renown. But the Bush administration's massive and
misdirected overreaction has handed al-Qaeda a far greater reward than
it ever dreamed of winning.

"The declaration of a global war on terrorism," says Richardson
bluntly, "has been a terrible mistake and is doomed to failure." In
declaring such a war, she says, the Bush administration chose to
mirror its adversary:

Americans opted to accept al-Qaeda's language of cosmic warfare at
face value and respond accordingly, rather than respond to al-Qaeda
based on an objective assessment of its resources and
capabilities.

In essence, America's actions radically upgraded Osama bin Laden's
organization from a ragtag network of plotters to a great enemy worthy
of a superpower's undivided attention. Even as it successfully
shattered the group's core through the invasion of Afghanistan,
America empowered al-Qaeda politically by its loud triumphalism, whose
very excess encouraged others to try the same terror tactics.

Worse yet, as the National Security Strategy documents clearly
show, the Bush administration willfully blended al-Qaeda into a
peculiar amalgam including other, far less urgent threats to concoct
a perceived global enemy.

The latter was a preconceived program: America's militarists have
been searching for a global enemy ever since the Soviet Union's collapse
deprived them of their Cold War raison d'être. But they miscalculated
severely in deciding to lash out at an abstract noun. The US military
wasn't built or oriented for such conflicts, and the political leaders
were deaf to how their bombing, invasions, and occupation would play
out. Both White House and Pentagon conceived the War on Terrorism in
familiar terms, as wars they could fight with the tools they favored.
The only thing surprising about their missing the target is how many
more targets popped up. But then they missed them too.

Started reading Richardson's book. I'll have more to say on it in
due course. One thing that strikes me is that she is rigorous in her
definitions, and unwilling to let any non-state terrorism slip by
under any other name. She doesn't take a pacifist position, but her
stance is compatible with one. As for the states, that should be the
subject for another book. She does point out that "state sponsors of
terrorism" -- states that back foreign groups that practice terror --
don't create terrorist groups, even though they facilitate them. As
for states that directly employ terror in the course of war, it is
fair to say that the psychology and motivation is different -- the
old adages about "following orders" and "the banality of evil" hold
up. It should also be stated that the scale of terror is different
too: modern military forces can do things that terrorist groups can
only fantasize about. We'll see whether Richardson gets into that
at all. She does mention that the trend among terrorists to target
random civilians arose alongside world wars where civilians were
the primary targets. The obvious conclusion is that if you want to
undercut terrorism a first step would be to take away the reference
model of interstate warfare.

Studying the Course

Now that we're no longer "staying the course" in Iraq, everyone's
coming forth to push their favorite new trajectories. On election
night, Fox's armchair quarterbacks William Kristol and Juan Williams
were calling for more troops and the kind of serious victory campaign
that Bush was too wimpy to pursue with an election pending. They did
hold out an olive branch to the "victory Democrats" -- the silver
lining they saw in an election where so many Americans were cuddling
up with terrorists. Senators John McCain and Joe Lieberman have also
been pushing for more troops. And then there are the "real men" --
the ones still angling for Tehran.

On the other hand, George McGovern and William Polk have written
a book with their "blueprint" for leaving Iraq. I've read the
executive
summary, and it seems like a reasonable proposal. It's based
on two insights: that the US presence in Iraq is the source of a
conflict that can only abate after the US exits, and that the US
needs to pay reparations and invest in reconstruction in order to
stabilize and legitimize an independent Iraqi government. Most of
the article is spent itemizing reconstruction budgets, which they
calculate in units matching the amount the US spends per day to
keep the war running: $246 million. The total bill they come up
with is about $17.25 billion -- about ten weeks at the current
burn rate.

The weak link in the plan is that the transition from American
withdrawal to stabilization is far from certain. They waive this
by with a statement that seems basically right but simplistic:

Indeed, after the withdrawal of American troops, as well as British
regular troops and mercenary forces, the insurgency, which was aimed
at achieving that objective, would almost immediately begin to lose
public support. Insurgent gunmen would either put down their weapons
or become publicly identified as outlaws.

Of course, it's more complicated than that. When the Americans
leave, there will be a power vacuum, and there is no shortage of
groups that might aspire to fill it. The extant Iraqi government
has limited and tainted legitimacy. They could gain legitimacy by
accommodating presently excluded groups, or they could try to keep
power by force. In the latter case, the insurgency will continue
with a new focus. Nor is the anti-US insurgency the only militia
that could challenge the central government, or each other. The
reasonable thing to do would be for these forces to concentrate
their power locally while sharing in an inclusive central umbrella
that would largely exist for divvying up reconstruction funds and
oil revenues. But that won't happen if some groups think they have
a chance of taking it all. Such hopes could be fostered by support
of any foreign government. That indeed is a big part of America's
problem in Iraq, but would also be true of Iran, Turkey, Syria,
Saudi Arabia, and Israel, and each of those nations has its own
preferred reordering of Iraq's fractures.

To some extent, McGovern and Polk brush this aside because they
truly respect post-withdrawal Iraq's independence. They recognize
that Iraqis will only accept a resolution that they arrive at on
their own. That is, after all, what independence means, and what
the American presence has made impossible. US withdrawal is the one
thing that can be tightly scheduled -- they have it starting by the
end of 2006 and complete six months later. Beyond that the plan's
recommendations are subject to Iraqi control. For practical purposes,
that means they depend on the Iraqis getting their system together.
Security and reconstruction aid are resources and incentives. For
instance:

To this end, we think that the Iraqi government would be wise to
request the temporary services of an international stabilization force
to police the country during and immediately after the period of
American withdrawal. Such a force should itself have a firm date fixed
for its removal. Our estimate is that Iraq would need this force for
no more than two years after the American withdrawal is complete.
During this period, the force could be slowly but steadily cut back in
both personnel and deployment. Its purpose would be limited to
activities aimed at enhancing public security.

This attitude of respect for Iraqi independence is what makes the
plan practicable. However, it has real political problems. First, it
runs against the basic American attitude to foreign aid, which is
that if we don't own it, we won't pay for it. That it costs us far
more to keep the fighting going is a rational argument. Another is
that leaving Iraq as an open sore with a failed government puts the
whole region at serious risk. But we didn't pay a dime for wrecking
Vietnam, and deep down it's going to be hard for many Americans to
swallow having to pay people after they rejected us.

An even bigger political problem is that such a resolution casts
doubts on our whole foreign policy in the region -- our unremitting
hostility to Iran and Syria, our unquestioning support of the most
dangerous factions of Israeli militarism, our holy war against what
we've taken to calling Islamofascism. If, say, we do what McGovern
and Polk propose, and the result is a stable, rebuilding Iraq that
does not export terrorism, that limits its opposition to Israel to
diplomacy, and that gets top dollar for its oil, where does that
leave the War on Terror? And if the neverending War on Terror dies,
where does that leave Bush?

It may be that McGovern and Polk don't much care about those
issues, but one thing we can be sure of is that James Baker does
think about those things. His Congressionally-mandated bipartisan
Iraq Study Group's report is much anticipated, although for now
its main utility has been to put off trying to solve the problem.
The Iraq Study Group's expertise in Iraq and the Middle East is
almost nil, but the one thing they do understand is Washington
politics. Just look at the membership: James Baker, Lee Hamilton,
Lawrence Eagleburger (replacing Robert Gates), Vernon Jordan, Ed
Meese, Sandra Day O'Connor, Leon Panetta, William Perry, Charles
Robb, Alan Simpson. There's not a lot of potential conflict here --
the Democrats are the sort who remain loyal opposition even under
Bush and Rove. The one curious thing about this group is that I
don't see any obvious Israeli lobbyists among them. That doesn't
make them any less pro-Israeli than the norm for politicians of
their standing. But it does raise a slight glimmer that they may
recognize that Israel has become the rotten root of America's
problems in the region.

Tony Blair has been in the press lately with his own thinking
about regional strategy, and he sees the connection between Iraq
and Israel, even if he's not very effective at acting upon it. (The
UK abstained from the UNSC resolution against Israel's invasion of
Gaza; the US vetoed the resolution.) Meanwhile, Bush has started
his own policy review group. As Robin Wright wrote in the
Washington
Post:

The White House review could give the administration alternatives
so that it feels less pressure to fully implement the recommendations
of the Iraq Study Group report, foreign policy experts said.

Bush made the decision after his national security team held secret
meetings Friday and Saturday to discuss the disparate efforts inside
the administration and the implications for Iraq after the Republican
defeat in the midterm elections. Further informal meetings were held
Monday before yesterday's decision, officials said.

Don't have any names associated with the Bush review. But a lot
of Pentagon brass have stepped forward to brag about their recent
successes. As I recall, the last time Bush's people studied the
question, they came up with research showing that the preferred
solution to the problem was "complete victory." I can't imagine
how they'll improve on that.

The Global Nexus of Terrorism

One thing Bush's "thumpin'" in the elections hasn't done is to
settle him down. First we saw a report that Democracy Boy signed
an executive order to permit US military training to resume in
Latin America. The explanation had something to do with the growing
threat of the left down there. Since the left has been winning
democratic elections, and the training is meant to help align
right-leaning military forces with US interests, the most likely
conclusion is that Bush is looking for military coups to do his
bidding. That was exactly what happened during the heyday of US
training from the '50s well into the '70s, when nearly every
nation in the region experienced military rule at one point or
another.

Such training had been suspended by Bush in cases where he
was trying to badger nations into signing bilateral treaties
that would protect US citizens from the International Criminal
Court. On the other hand, Bush seems to have no qualms about
foreign courts charging his favorite betes noires. From a
Reurters report (via warincontext.org):

The White House branded Iran and Hezbollah on Saturday as a "global
nexus of terrorism" and applauded an Argentine court for seeking the
arrest of former Iranian officials in the 1994 bombing of a Jewish
center.

In the Bush administration's latest rhetorical assault on Iran,
White House spokesman Tony Snow issued a statement saying the Islamic
republic was responsible for the deaths of hundreds of innocent
civilians as the world's "leading state sponsor of terrorism."
It gave no specifics.

Hundreds? 1994? I don't wish to belittle that, but right now,
in the context of Bush in Iraq, that's a rather long and desperate
stretch for political points. The histeria over Iran has cranked
up again following the elections, with Olmert visiting Washington
to make the case, and Netanyahu pushing his favorite analogy
(reported by Peter Hirschberg in Haaretz):

Drawing a direct analogy between Iran and Nazi Germany, Likud
leader Benjamin Netanyahu asserted Monday that the Iranian nuclear
program posed a threat not only to Israel, but to the entire western
world. There was "still time," however, to prevent Tehran from
acquiring nuclear weapons, he said.

"It's 1938 and Iran is Germany. And Iran is racing to arm itself
with atomic bombs," Netanyahu told delegates to the annual United
Jewish Communities General Assembly, repeating the line several times,
like a chorus, during his address. "Believe him and stop him," the
opposition leader said of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. "This
is what we must do. Everything else pales before this."

While the Iranian president "denies the Holocaust," Netanyahu said,
"he is preparing another Holocaust for the Jewish state."

Someone should advise Netanyahu on Godwin's Law. At least, he's out
of the government -- just a cheerleader for genocide --but the even
more extremist Avigdor Lieberman has joined Olmert with a portfolio
that specifically includes dealing with Iran. It seems that Israel
is anxious to egg the US into a military confrontation with Iran,
much as Bush was so pleased with Israel taking over the news cycle
by attacking Lebanon. By the time that misadventure ended, Olmert
was the political equivalent of dead meat, so you can understand
his desperation -- even though the last thing most Israelis need
is a polarizing war.

This leads us back to the question of whether Bush will attack
Iran. Most observers believe not, citing a long list of reasons
why doing so would top invading Iraq as the dumbest thing he's ever
done. I figured he at least wouldn't do it before the election. At
the very least doing so would reinforce the notion that he's a very
dangerous loose cannon, and beyond that any number of repercussions
could redound against him -- at the very least, the oil markets and
gas prices would panic. On the other hand, he celebrated the 2004
elections by launching an offensive against Falluja, and the 2002
elections led to the Iraq war. Nothing in his character makes me
think his response would be more measured just because he lost this
one. He is, after all, still president, and one way to remind us of
that is to start another war.

One problem with tough talk is that it starts to box you in,
making it all the more likely that you'll have to act tough to
keep face. Bush's whole Middle East policy has turned into a
poison pill. But it's still not clear how much damage he'll do
before it kills him.

Music: Current count 12557 [12536] rated (+19), 889 [903] unrated (-14).
Still haven't catalogued the Fresh Sound New Talents -- ran out of boxes,
and I'm awaiting a new shipment. Didn't feel much like prospecting jazz
anyway, and had various other distractions. Also played a lot of things
without settling on a grade. Should start to get back in gear this week,
but not sure.

Davendra Banhart: Cripple Crow (2005, XL):
Singer-songwriter, enjoys a good critical reputation, but thus
far Robert Christgau has yet to weigh in on him. This is his
latest -- the first I've heard of four. He spent at least some
of his childhood in Venezuela, which shows up here as one of
the flavorings in a generally eclectic mix. B+(**)

Harry Connick Jr.: Harry on Broadway: Act 1
(2006, Columbia, 2CD): Two volumes of Broadway theatre music,
one the cast album of The Pajama Game, the other a remake
of Thou Shalt Not, both pairing Connick off with Kelli
O'Hara. Not bad for that sort of thing, especially when the
music takes over from the necessarily dramatic vocals. Slight
edge to the moodier Thou Shalt Not, which doesn't make
you imagine chorus dancers jerking away in the background.
Francis Davis wrote an approving piece on this in the Voice.
B

Hazmat Modine: Bahamut (1999-2005 [2006], Barbès):
The group these New Yorkers most remind me of is the Blasters, especially
when Wade Schuman sings something hooked into the blues tradition.
But whereas the Blasters were content to play American music, this
group searches the world for borrowed roots, ranging from Hawaiian
steel guitar to Gypsy cimbalom to an alliance with Tuvan throat
singers Huun-Huur-Tu. Moreover, their core sound comes from two
harmonicas on top of tuba -- a blast of hot air from nowhere in
particular. Guess that makes them postmodern folkies.
A-

Journey Into Paradise: The Larry Levan Story
(1978-86 [2006], Rhino, 2CD): Disco started in the pop-soul world,
dominating the charts in the mid-'70s as the politically charged
'60s burned out or went underground, and the Me Generation took
over the dancefloor. But disco itself changed in the late '70s,
moving into its own underground as dance clubs deviated from pop
formula by favoring extended 12-inch mixes. Levan was DJ at New
York's Paradise Garage, where he went beyond spinning discs to
remixing to producing. His joint closed in 1987 and he died at
38 in 1992, by which point techno had taken over dance music.
There are hints of that here, especially as he busts a move from
Sister Sledge to Talking Heads, but he never let preconceptions
about the music get in the way of the ecstatic moment.
A-

Kid Rock & the Twisted Brock Trucker Band: 'Live'
Trucker (2006, Atlantic): I don't mind his shtick -- even
though its polymorphuous perversity is received, its grossness can
pass for humor. But he sure sells out cheap. The pimp thing is
pretty tired. The cowboy thing is getting there. That he's from
Detroit may excuse how shamelessly he plays the crowd, but you
figure he'd do the same for Charlotte, especially if they whipped
the Lakers. And he'd do the same for El Lay if they didn't. B

Lady Sovereign: Vertically Challenged (2005,
Chocolate Industries): Billed as an EP, list $11.98, five songs
plus three remixes. Not sure if that's much of a deal, but the
repetition doesn't hurt, and the total length is a respectable
36:31. This particular copy comes with a DVD as well, which has
no value, at least for me. A-

The Roots: Game Theory (2006, Def Jam): The rap
group famous for playing their instruments instead of regurgitating
pop samples has an unusually steady beat, cranked up more than usual
here. That alone makes this compelling. I'm slow as usual on the
words, but none strike me as false or bogus. Takes a while for it
all to sink in, and I'm rushing a bit working on a library copy.
Publicist let me down here. A-

'70s Soul: Gold (1970-79 [2006], Hip-O, 2CD):
Enough cross-licensing to provide a general feel, but the skew
toward the early '70s is notable -- only 7 of 36 songs hale from
the second half of the decade, when disco and funk went their own
ways, and still popular MOR sagged, proving forgettable.
A-

Spady: The Long Way Around and Other Short Stories
(Post Script): Working in Nashville and on the road since 1974,
Spady Brannan played bass behind Reba McEntire and many others.
Here he steps out with a first album of well observed craft.
B

Vienna Teng: Dreaming Through the Noise (2006,
Zoë/Rounder): California singer-songwriter, born 1978, on her
third album. She has a Joni Mitchell voice, similar musicality
though her timing isn't quite as sharp. Album turns chamberish
toward the end, like maybe she's aiming for Kate Bush. B+(*)

Yeah Yeah Yeahs: Show Your Bones (2006, Interscope):
Rocks hard, with an attractive snap. Song structure is hard to fault.
Can't say that any of the songs, attractive as they are, connect, but
I'm working off a library copy, and my investment is limited. Could
see someone more committed getting into this.
B+(***)

No Jazz Prospecting

Once again, I don't have enough jazz prospecting to report. Looking
back, I'm not sure what happened to last week. Don't have much to show
for it. Maybe I did need a break. Didn't get much in the mail either.
The only thing I do have to report is that I did hear back from Rob
Harvilla at the Village Voice. He says he'll run Jazz Consumer Guide
late November or early December: "after publishing this one i'd like
to reassess . . . let's talk more before you start laying the groundwork
for the next." Of course, I've already started with the usual transition
work. Still, good news so far.

Not sure how this coming week will work out, but it's probable that
I will have some prospecting notes to post next week -- starting with
catching up on the recycled jazz I skipped toward the end of the last
column.

Fringe Moves

Warincontex.org
quotes Harry de Quetteville of the Sunday Telegraph writing about
Avigdor Lieberman:

When Avigdor Lieberman, a populist Israeli politician frequently
compared to Austria's Jorg Haider and France's Jean-Marie le Pen,
proposed to bus thousands of Palestinians to the Dead Sea and drown
them there, he was just a fringe member of government.

That was three years ago. But last week the controversial
nationalist joined the coalition government led by Ehud Olmert in a
much more senior role, as vice prime minister with special
responsibility for Israel's most pressing issue: the threat from
Iran.

In his first interview since taking office -- exclusively with The
Sunday Telegraph -- Mr Lieberman said that the best means of achieving
peace in the Middle East would be for Jews and Arabs to live apart,
including those Arabs who now live inside Israel.

I've been meaning to at least note Lieberman's accession to the
inner circle of the Olmert government, but it seems to have passed
over with little notice. Indeed, Israel's continuing offensive in
Gaza has been little noticed in the press, even though the UN Security
Council voted overwhelmingly against it -- without effect, of course,
since the US vetoed the resolution.

The main thing I want to point out isn't that Lieberman is
monstrous, but that his grant of an official role in Israel's
government serves to legitimize him and all he stands for or
against. This is analogous to the inclusion of Menachem Begin
in the unity government that launched the 1967 War. Before then
Begin was considered as far out on the fringe as Lieberman has
been considered until now. Within a decade Begin became Prime
Minister. During Begin's reign Israel's conflict changed radically:
before it was concerned with preserving Israel's existence in a
neighborhood of hostile Arab states; Begin made peace with Egypt --
actually, Sadat made peace with Israel -- which allowed him to
concentrate the conflict against the Palestinians, both in exile
(e.g., Lebanon) and in the Occupied Territories. Under Begin the
conflict no longer had anything to do with defending Israel's
continued existence.

On the other hand, it wasn't only Begin who drove the conflict
in this direction. The Labor-dominated government that launched
the 1967 War was the one that occupied the territories, annexed
Jerusalem, promulgated the Allon plan, and started the settlements
that have proved critical in cementing the continuing tyranny of
Jew over Arab in the region. Inviting Begin into the government
paved the way to policies that Labor might have flinched from on
their own. Inviting Lieberman into the government may very well
signal the same course. Olmert may be more circumspect than
Lieberman, but his policies tend in the same direction.

Rumsfeld's War

The news that Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is to be the Bush
Administration's ritual sacrifice on the altar of its electoral rebuke
comes as no surprise: It had been obvious for months now the call for
Rumsfeld's head is a kind of consensual fetish among those who
supported the Iraq war for not having to deal with their own
culpability in the catastrophe it inevitably became. I say
"inevitably" because you don't have to have a working knowledge of
Iraqi history to have anticipated how Iraqis would respond to their
country being occupied by a foreign army -- you simply needed to have
watched "Red Dawn" back in the 80s. [ . . . ]

But instead of admitting and reckoning with the fact that the war
they advocated was a catastrophically bad idea, everyone from neocon
hacks to flip-flopping Democrats, Bob Woodward (arch channeler of
White House sources) and the self-styled "liberal hawks" of the
chattering classes, like Peter Beinart and George Packer, have signed
on to the notion that it was a good war, the right war, executed
badly, because Rumsfeld adhered to some bizarre capital-intensive
theory of warfare. In other words, if Rumsfeld had simply sent more
troops, the outcome would have been different.

Of course, the outcome would have been little different. If you
accept the argument that US troops generate their own resistance,
more troops might very well have accelerated the revolt. But there
were two bigger problems with more troops: one is that Rumsfeld
didn't have the troops to spend; the other is that the political
price of budgeting the troops might have sunk the whole war plan.
If the best way to kill a project is to exaggerate its costs, the
corresponding way to sell a project is to minimize its costs. The
whole administration did everything they could to lowball the Iraq
War. Rumsfeld erred in not correcting those estimates, just as he
erred in not sorting out his department's "intelligence" on Iraq.
He did those things not because he was incompetent but because he
had an overriding political agenda -- the same agenda as Cheney,
Bush, Rove, et al., which was to push War to dominate the federal
government. Different people may have favored different views of
this agenda. For Bush himself, it was the chance to put himself
forward as Commander in Chief, the War President. For Rumsfeld,
it certainly helped that it grew his department.

The interesting thing here is that Rumsfeld's goals, and for
that matter Bush's goals, didn't require, and to some extend didn't
need or even want, a clean, speedy resolution of the war. As Bush
knew from his father's experience, a short, unsatisfying war can
backfire politically. The rally-around-the-leader effect ends when
the war ends, so why end the war? Why not stretch it out a bit, at
least through the 2004 election? It's unlikely that Rumsfeld and Bush
meant to screw it up as badly as they did, but they deliberately did
not seek a soft landing. They could have turned civil administration
immediately over to the UN and started withdrawing before the revolt
geared up, making credible their liberation-not-occupation propaganda
claim. That they didn't do this may be chalked up to arrogance, but
not incompetence. That they couldn't do what they supposedly tried
to do may also be more a matter of arrogance than incompetence --
the former attempts the impossible, while the latter merely fails
at the achievable. If Bush's concept of victory, whatever it is, was
impossible, it doesn't matter if incompetence did it in before it
would have failed anyway.

F5 Record Report (#15: November 9, 2006)

This week's F5 Record Report made it to the website in a timely
manner this week. Find it with the usual
link. This
was another deadline pressure column -- Jazz CG was done, but I
was still in the middle of Recycled Goods, so I doubled up there
a bit. The lineup is:

As usual, I just finished next week's column. In it, only one of seven
records is cribbed off either Jazz CG or Recycled Goods. After having been
jammed so often with other deadlines, it was nice to break loose and try
to catch up with some of the new non-jazz out there.

Letter to publicists:

This week's F5 Record Report presumably has a record of interest to
you. F5 is a weekly entertainment tabloid distributed free here in
Wichita KS. I cover 6-8 records per week, sometimes recycling from
other columns. The following URL will get you the latest column,
and the "next article" links will cycle you back in time.
http://www.f5wichita.com/mba.php?id=55
For more info, see:
http://tomhull.com/ocston/music.php
The index by label:
Akron Cracker: Carneyball Johnson
Arbors: Aaron Weinstein
ECM: Stephen Stubbs
High Note: Houston Person/Bill Charlap
Sony/BMG (Legacy): Barry Manilow
Sunnyside: Les Primitifs du Futur
Tumi Music: Saborit
Thanks for your interest and support.

Sorting the Election

A couple of thoughts about the election. It's worth noting again
that I've paid very little attention to the gory details. I'm not
one of those news junkie types. I take a look at the Wichita Eagle
daily and a glance at the New York Times on Sunday. I check out a
few blogs, but nothing on the right and nothing closer to the
Democratic Party than Salon -- only after the polls closed did I
pull up Salon's War Room. Occasionally see some TV news, but not
much recently. The net effect of this is that I've managed to keep
relatively free of preconceptions about the Democrats this time.
But the results strike me thus:

For the first time I remember, the Democrats actually have
some sort of coordinated, coherent Congressional political machine.
The Republicans have had one since at least 1994 and probably a
good deal longer, but as late as 2004 any Democrats who wanted to
run for Congress were mostly on their own -- the well-heeled Kerry
campaign could hardly acknowledge them.

The levers of power on that machine are securely in the
hands of performance-oriented pragmatists -- i.e., people who
care more about winning than why, or more importantly are so
sick and tired of getting their asses kicked that they'll do
damn near anything to halt it. I think that has little to do
with ideology, which they take as a given, not a cause. This
distinguishes them from the New Democrats, who tried to push
their ideology as pragmatism.

They have a healthy fear of getting tagged as leftists,
and they shrewdly have no worries about losing the left. They
made no effort to save Ned Lamont, which I find very irritating.
But they figured Lieberman counted just as well so for their
count the seat made no difference, and they feared two things
about Lamont: that the Republians would tar him as way to the
left, and that he would inspire others to fracture the Party's
unity along ideological grounds.

The elections turned out to follow all the conventional
rules about money, organization, and positioning -- i.e., they
were subject to the skills and resources that the machine could
muster. I'm not aware of any surprise upsets. The Democrats who
won competitive districts were blessed by the national machine,
and those who weren't had no chance.

Two things made races look attractive to the Democratic
machine: they challenged seats that were either on friendly
ground or were occupied by Republicans who had moved so far
to the right that they had left the whole center open. They
were very effective within those limits.

But the Democrats didn't have a unifying national campaign,
like the Republicans had in 1994 with the Contract on America scam.
Nor did they have an ally like Ross Perot -- a pseudo-independent
shill who threw his weight behind the anti-incumbent Republicans.
Rather, what unified them was Bush, but even that was diffused by
local issues. Bush's approval ratings were down about 10 points
from 2004, but his effect on the election was more like 5 points.
That put the Republicans on the defensive, and that helped the
Democrats to sharpen their attack.

The Republicans' usual tactics worked, but less effectively
than before. The gaps between what they say and what they do, and
between what they try to do and the results they get, have started
to erode their credibility -- although there are still many people
who follow their lead wherever they go. Because the tactics still
work, the Democrats are still wary of them.

On the other hand, look for the Republicans' spin to fail.
Arguing that the Democrats won by running conservatives concedes
that the Republicans are no longer the conservatives -- they've
moved on to become something else. Arguing that the Republicans
failed because they weren't true conservatives doesn't help them
much either.

The Democrats' pragmatic centrism doesn't bother me all that
much. It's built on the idea of unifying popular opposition to
the Republicans, and we've rarely if ever had more motivation to
form a unified front. By contrast, the New Democrats were out to
divide the party by routing the left -- Nader in 2000 was one of
many results of that strategy. But the problems the right has
ignored, accelerated, or outright created have penetrated the
mainstream so thoroughly that that's where the battle lines are
drawn. Democratic centrism still has one foot in reality, and
the issues are increasingly what will demand our attention.

Still, the Democrats still have a lot to learn. The idea that
by controlling Congress they'll be governing is certainly false.
The presidency is still an extraordinary power base, even for
presidents far less megalomaniacal than Bush. And unity will be
harder to maintain as the Republicans push their wedge issues.
But for the last six years the Democrats in Washington have been
all but totally silenced, and that at least will start to change.
The media follows what they regard as legitimate power centers,
and control of Congress gives the Democrats one. That sets the
stage for 2008, which will depend on two things: how badly Bush
continues to fare, and how credible the Democrats become. In many
ways, the election this one closely resembles is 1930. The Crash
of 1929 turned a shocked nation against the Republicans, but the
1930 election was still razor thin: the Republicans held control
of Congress by a margin so thin it evaporated before the 1932
election, which Roosevelt won in a landslide. I don't know who
the Democrats have who could do that, but any signs of competency
at all are good signs. Bush, on the other hand, is sure to do his
part.

The Wichita Eagle today showed surprising love for the Democrats.
In article after article, they celebrated how Kansans turned to
MODERATION. Nowhere in the paper could you find the dreaded word
LIBERAL. Admittedly, moderate is a label that still can cross
party lines, as was the case for a couple of Republicans elected
to take the state Board of Education back from the creationists.
But the banner of moderation was mostly held up by Democrats. The
real import of the election appears to be that the Democrats have
gained legitimacy as the party of the sane center. That in itself
is a remarkable comeback for a party that has been battered and
reeling for most of the last 25 years. That should give them new
confidence and resolve. And as branding it's a plus: much better
to be viewed as a moderate than as a liberal, I'd say.

Bush Referenda

The election results are more mixed than I would have liked --
it's still mostly politics-as-usual, with money and organization
critical factors, even if some of the rules have shifted a bit.
Still, one thing is clear: Democracy Day's big loser wasn't on
any ballot even though he campaigned tirelessly the last weeks.
Tim Grieve, at Salon, tallies up Bush's campaign stops:

Oct. 26: Bush campaigned for Republican Senate candidate
Mike Bouchard in Michigan. He lost. Bush also campaigned for Iowa
House candidate Jeff Lamberti. The president kept calling him "Dave,"
but he lost, too.

Nov. 6: Bush campaigned for Rick Perry in Texas and Asa
Hutchinson in Arkansas. Perry won, Hutchinson lost. Bush also
campaigned for Charlie Crist in Florida, but Crist ditched the
president in favor of his own event at the other end of the
state. Good call: He won.

Too bad Bush didn't go to Connecticut to campaign for Shays
and Lieberman, but they no doubt knew that would have been a
bad move. I suppose you could argue that Bush stuck his neck
out in some of these races, but you didn't see him dropping in
on lost cases like Curt Weldon and John Hostetler. Bush only
went to places he carried in 2004, so this just underscores
his losing touch.

Another loser of the night was John Kerry. He wasn't on the
ballot either, but will be remembered as the guy who lost to
Bush -- the guy who should have done what Democrats all over
the country did yesterday.

Postscript: As soon as I had this ready to go, another
loser stepped up: Donald Rumsfeld. As you'll recall, I argued that
should the Democrats win Congress they should start their spring
housecleaning by holding impeachment hearings on Rumsfeld. Maybe
more folks read my blog than I thought. Too bad. The case against
him would have been delicious -- much more entertaining than the
Hague is capable of.

Recycled Goods #37: November 2006

Better late than never, Recycled Goods #37, November 2006, has
been posted at
Static
Multimedia. I had quite a bit left over from the October column,
so didn't worry much as the due date approached. But Jazz CG didn't
close until two or three days before the end of October, and that
left me a bit short. The big chunk was the the Sonet blues reissues.
I've had the first batch done for quite a while, so wanted to get
them out, but also wanted to fold the second batch in. The latter
didn't arrive until quite late. I also had a second batch of Barry
Manilow to deal with. (Thankfully, I flushed all my Journey reissues
out in October, so wasn't tempted to deal with their second batch.)
And there was a big pile of obvious stuff from UME that I wasn't
sure how to deal with -- "in series" or piecemeal? I went for the
latter, letting me cherry pick some easy ones and push others --
including several 2-CD Gold titles -- back. That actually
didn't take all that long, but other delays dragged the posting
out.

One oddity is that the publisher has taken a different tack on
the pick hit illustrations. Used to be I'd pick two records and
they'd show both album covers on the page. Now I pick two records,
and they put the first as a thumbnail on the Music page and the
second on the column page. That sort of changes the semantics.
Last month I suspected the change was because of the form factor
of the box sets, but that's not the case here. What makes it
odder is that strictly on grade the pick hits should have been
Chuck Berry and Etta James, but I went with Earl King to give
you an idea what the Sonet packaging looks like. Berry's first
listing got him pushed off the page. Not sure what to do about
this. Maybe I need to start submitting my own artwork?

How I'm Feeling Now

Like everybody else, I don't know what's going to happen today, but
this election has already illuminated one critical truth: The modern
GOP -- or, more specifically, the Axis of '70s Campus Republicans
running it -- really is just a criminal enterprise disguised as a
political party.

Dirty tricks, large and small, are a sorry fact of life in American
politics, but what the Republicans have done over the past few weeks
-- the surrealist attack ads, the forged endorsements, the midnight
robo calls, the arrest threats, the voter misinformation (did you know
your polling station has been moved?) -- is sui generis, at least at
the national level.

Even Dick Nixon never tried anything like this on such a grand
scale -- although, of course, he also didn't have the technology. The
only thing we haven't seen yet is a break in at DNC headquarters. And
if the Rovians thought they could get anything out of it that would be
useful in this election (nobody else has) we'd probably be reading
about that, too.

It's always possible to point to Democratic/liberal offenses, but
at this point the comparisons look pretty silly: some downed yard
signs here, a few crooked and/or stoned ACORN canvassers there. Not
even in the same universe, much less the same ball park.

Couple the GOP's rat-fucking campaign with all the other stuff we
already know about -- the collectivized bribery of the K Street
Project, the Abramoff casino extortion ring, the Defense and CIA
appropriation scams, the Iraq War contracting scams, the Pacific
Island sex trade protection racket, the church pulpits doubling as
ward halls, the illegal wiretapping, the lies, perjury and obstruction
of justice in the Plame case (I really could go on like this all day)
-- and it's clear that what we need most isn't a new Congress but a
new RICO prosecution, with lots of defendents and unindicted
co-conspirators.

At some point it would be good to do a real autopsy of how the
Rovians took over the GOP and used it to spearhead their adolescent
revolutionary fantasies. I hardly know where to begin -- apologies
to Godwin, but the last time a group of relative outsiders conned
the rich into letting them lead a right-wing putsch in an advanced
industrial nation was the Nazis. As with Germany in the '30s, one
keeps wondering not just how long the people will put up with them,
but how long the old establishment will tolerate them. But like
Germany in the '30s, both potential checks on their power grab are
frozen, unable to conceive of the real dangers of such ruthlessness.

Of course, there are differences. The US has a democratic legacy,
whereas Germans in the '30s could recall their lives under the Kaiser.
The '30s were still stuck in the Age of Imperialism, where military
might ruled and conquests promised future profits, whereas the US
empire shrouds itself in feel-good liberal platitudes. Racism was
another card that Hitler could freely play, whereas the Republicans
have to be more circumspect about it. So the Republicans can't be
anywhere near as brutal as the Nazis, but they make up for it by
being better liars. On the other hand, the Nazis had to actually
build something, and they were reasonably competent at pulling the
nation out of depression until they bit off more war than they
could chew. The Republicans inherited their empire, and were so
confident of it that they felt free to strip it for party favors
for their sponsors. Competency at actually running anything was
a skill they never bothered with. They were selected for nothing
more than their ability to fashion talking points. They were safe
as long as they never had to do anything but sound good, but were
way too successful at it. Given power, they acted on two fronts:
on one, they ripped off the government for personal and political
gain; on the other, they indulged their delusions about how the
world works.

Both have gotten them into a shitload of trouble, but that's
just redoubled their efforts to manipulate the public's perception
of the truth. In 2002 and 2004 they managed to barely keep one
step ahead of the consequences of their acts. They may still get
away with that in today's elections, but even if they lose some
margin of their control in Congress and elsewhere, they're still
certain to come out much better than their record deserves. The
buttons they've successfully pushed during their rise to the top
don't work as well as they used to, but they still work better
than they should. The public's misunderstanding of what they've
done is still staggering. You can chalk this up to ignorance or
indifference, but a large part of it is that we just have trouble
calibrating people who are outside the range of our experience.
Take this thought experiment, or better yet do some research:
would an average German in 1937 believe that the Nazi government
would do what they in fact did do? Looking back, we can see all
the signs, but very few could see it at the time -- mostly Jews
and/or Communists.

Even if the Republicans survive and recover, they won't turn
into Nazis. They have something far more Orwellian in mind, and
far more corrupt -- most likely, a synthesis of a Brezhnev-style
single-party police state and a Suharto-style kleptocracy, with
a Saudi-style mullah-managed welfare sop for the bleeding hearts.
Of course, they're not going to be able to propagandize it in
those terms, but they'll come up with some clever way to phrase
it. We can do what we can to knock down that propaganda, but at
this stage it would be more useful to knock down its proponents.
The Republicans have been able to get away with six years of their
Bushshit because they've been able to take advantage of the trust
given the GOP. Their future in crime depends on salvaging that
trust. Getting smarter would help us resist them, but locking
them up would work even better. Might even let us move on to
more generic man-made problems, rather than just having to
struggle against Republican-made ones.

Endorsements

I voted for the first time in 1972. I had a mix of Democrats
running against bad Republicans, a few Republicans running against
even worse Democrats, and a few third party candidates where neither
of the major parties had anyone running I'd want on my conscience.
Everyone I voted for lost, mostly by huge margins. It was more than
20 years before I voted again. Since the mid-'90s I've voted with
some regularity, figuring that it's a gesture of citizenship, even
if one that the candidates and parties manage to make as distasteful
as possible.

I doubt that I've ever paid as little attention to the details --
who's running against whom, what they think the issues are, how the
horse races shape up -- as I have this year. Starting around 1964 I
paid a lot of attention to major party politics, even to the point
of spending many hours at the library pouring over Congressional
Quarterly reports, and building Kevin Phillips-like county voting
maps extending as far back as the 1870s. Even when I didn't vote
I knew most of the details. On the other hand, this election is not
one where the devil's in the details. At this point, the devil is
as large and unavoidable as an elephant. I'm not sure why Thomas
Nast came up with his partisan caricatures, but for once they fit.
The Republican Party is huge, solid, powerful, a well-oiled machine
built to pursue political power and the spoils that follow. On the
other hand, the Democrats are, at best, cantankerous individualists.
Of course, the Democrats are rarely at their best, but their lack
of discipline and their inherent weaknesses are far less damaging
than Republican cohesiveness. It's gotten to where variation in
the Republican Party is nothing more than camouflage, which allows
a Mitt Romney or Lincoln Chafee or Olympia Snowe to do limited but
valuable Party work in otherwise unfavorable electorates. Indeed,
Party discipline is so calculating and so strict they've swung hard
behind Joe Lieberman in Connecticut, figuring he's the best they
can get, and willing to settle.

Republican cohesion was built up during their years out of power,
when they put together their coalition of anti-Democrats -- groups
that spanned the rich and the bigotted, and included such natural
enemies as libertarians and churchly prohibitionists. Pragmatically
they vowed never to attack each other, and that helped them overcome
the intrinsic limits of their various positions. It's not like the
rich have a natural advantage in an honest democracy, but they've
been able to leverage the advantages they have by making politics as
cash-intensive as possible. Many of the Republicans' puzzle pieces
are minority positions: racists, gun nuts, militarists, the "born
again" crowd and their anti-abortion fanatics. But by focusing on
their common loathing of the Democrats they've managed to hold their
united front together -- so far, anyway.

The Republicans will probably wind up being victims of their
success, if their failures don't get them first. Any organization
defined by what it's against is likely to have some surprises in
store when it takes power. Republican power might have been wielded
by pragmatic pro-business types, like those who have done well in
the upper Midwest. But as it happens the power fell into the hands
of Dick Cheney, Karl Rove, and their favorite stooge, and they took
full advantage of leading a party of blind followers -- in fact, led
them over the cliff and into the abyss, with hardly any defections.
I'm tempted to compare this to the Stalinists, who hijacked a Party
that started out opposed to the Tsar and wound up no better. But the
more American analogy is to franchise businesses. Petit Republicans
are no more likely to break brand identity than McDonalds franchisees
are likely to change the menu.

Still, it happens. At least it's happening in Kansas, where the
Democratic nominees for Lieutenant Governor and Attorney General are
ex-Republicans, and where an ex-Republican running against idiot Rep.
Jim Ryun has come close enough to bring Bush himself to the state to
rally the faithful. Governor Kathleen Sebelius may have been born
Democrat -- her father was former Governor James Gilligan of Ohio --
but her name is Republican, having married the son of long-time US
Rep. Keith Sebelius. The Wichita Eagle had an advertisement today
listing names of numerous Republicans, including state school board
member Carol Rupe and former Attorney General Carla Stovall, endorsing
new Democrat Paul Morrison in his Attorney General race against child
molestor Phill Kline. One conclusion I draw from this is that it is
possible for Republicans to come to their senses and leave the Party.
That, in turn, reflects negatively on the morals and scruples of
those who don't.

So that's my rationale for casting a straight party line ballot
for the Democrats on Tuesday. It's not that I like them, either
individually or collectively. It's that Republican Party power has
mutated into a uniquely malevolent force in America and the world --
so much so that anything that weakens that power should be a step
for the better. After all, Bush's power isn't personal: it's built
up from every rung, from every foot soldier in the machine. Take
Congress away that some of that power diminishes. It won't stop him,
but it will start to make him accountable. Take away the state houses,
the county and district and city offices, and you take more power
away. The objection that there are some good Republicans and many
bad Democrats doesn't matter any more: the last six years have given
us the raw taste of one party rule. One of the peculiarities of the
US political system is that we only get one day every two years to
have any say about who governs. That's Tuesday.

At this point, nobody should have any illusions about Mr. Bush's
character. To put it bluntly, he's an insecure bully who believes that
owning up to a mistake, any mistake, would undermine his manhood --
and who therefore lives in a dream world in which all of his policies
are succeeding and all his officials are doing a heckuva job. Just
last week he declared himself "pleased with the progress we're making"
in Iraq.

In other words, he's the sort of man who should never have been put
in a position of authority, let alone been given the kind of
unquestioned power, free from normal checks and balances, that he was
granted after 9/11. But he was, alas, given that power, as well as a
prolonged free ride from much of the news media.

The results have been predictably disastrous. The nightmare in Iraq
is only part of the story. In time, the degradation of the federal
government by rampant cronyism -- almost every part of the executive
branch I know anything about, from the Environmental Protection Agency
to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has been FEMAfied
-- may come to be seen as an equally serious blow to America's
future.

When Krugman describes the Bush disaster as predictable, it's worth
noting that he was on the track from the beginning. In early 2001, he
published Fuzzy Math: The Essential Guide to the Bush Tax Plan,
which has proven to be prescient, even if only the tip of the proverbial
ice berg.

Music: Current count 12536 [12506] rated (+30), 903 [900] unrated (+3).
Recycled Goods done. F5 is a weekly grind, but not too bad. Don't have
everything catalogued, but this is close enough for now. Seems like I
haven't been getting much, but the unrateds keep their numbers up.

The Gap Band: Greatest Hits (1979-89 [1997],
Polygram): Only one shot after 1983, and not that great. Which
makes this Special Products toss-off redundant to better selected,
and more generous, comps elsewhere.
B

Tom T. Hall: The Definitive Collection (1968-84
[2006], Hip-O): A preacher's kid from Kentucky, Hall parlayed his
army tour into a radio career, then headed to Nashville to write
songs. After Jeannie C. Riley hit with his "Harper Valley P.T.A."
he started recording his own songs. He wrote two kinds: sharply
observed stories of ordinary people -- try to find "It Sure Can
Get Cold in Des Moines" and "Who's Gonna Feed Them Hogs" -- and
soft, sappy homilies -- titles like "I Love," "I Care," "I Like
Beer," and "Country Is" are dead giveaways. While the two can
converge -- "Old Dogs, Children and Watermelon Wine" and "Faster
Horses" are platitudes from geezers -- the claptrap spoils the
literature. Since both yielded hits, his compilations are often
dreadful -- the exception is the rigorous The Essential Tom
T. Hall: The Story Songs (1968-84 [1998], Mercury), still
in print and cheaper than this career compromiser, a carbon
copy of 2001's The Ultimate Collection.
B+(***)

Buddy Holly: The Definitive Collection (1956-58
[2006], Geffen/Decca/Chronicles): Born in Lubbock TX, so far removed
from the centers of American culture that he stitched together
his own unquestioning synthesis of everything: country, gospel,
doo-wop, rockabilly, and pop from Tin Pan Alley to the Brill
Building. The Brits who invaded in 1964 loved him, not least
because he paved their way by inventing Merseybeat. Dead at age
22, his three years in the studio were so prolific this 26-cut
summary omits "Reminiscing" and "Tell Me How" -- and he was so
concise that whatever the reason was it wasn't space. His only
limit was subject matter, which ranges from hopeful love songs
to deliriously happy love songs.
A

Sebadoh: Sebadoh III (1991 [2006], Domino, 2CD):
Lou Barlow specialized in post-grunge confessionals, which come and
go in this scattered 23-cut breakthrough of sorts, augmented with a
second disc of extras that are hardly any more hit and miss, at least
until the long, tedious exercise in sloganeering that wraps it up.
B

Sebadoh: Harmacy (1996, Sub Pop): A big advance in
songcraft over III, if not necessarily over the intervening
Bakesale. B+

No Jazz Prospecting

No jazz prospecting this week. After finishing the Jazz CG
last week, I shifted to Recycled Goods, spending most of the
week on November's late column. Done now, but still not posted.
Other massive disruptions last week, but mostly I want to clean
up my bookkeeping before resuming the Jazz Prospecting posts.
This includes the usual purge and resynch.

No word back from Voice music editor Rob Harvilla, so I don't
know when, or for that matter if, the Voice will run the column.
I have no contingency plans either. For now, still assume this
is business as usual. I've taken a week or two out during each
column break in the past, so nothing unusual here.

As of this point, the pending file is down to 68 albums, but
I haven't logged last week's incoming yet -- most notably, a
large pile of Fresh Sound New Talent and a new record and some
background oldies from Ellery Eskelin. The done file is at 128.
I doubt that the purge will knock it down much. Upcoming week
should be relatively unpressured -- unless, of course, Bush's
reaction to Tuesday's elections is to bomb Iran on Wednesday.
Barring such calamities, I should be ready to resume next week.

Peace Party

Well, that's over. The Wichita Peace Center came up with an idea for
fundraising: that volunteers would host dinner parties at their houses,
invite guests, and charge them $20+/head donations, figuring it works
out to about what a restaurant dinner would cost. That's what's I did,
what's over, except for the leftovers and the cleanup. Once again, I
got a little carried away, which may be why I'm tired and down now.
Actually hosted two dinners in quick succession -- made enough meze
for both, then pilaf and two entrees that could be popped into the
oven to finish them. Had 18 people. Discounting labor, we probably
came out ahead, but labor was a big discount.

Some of these recipes are online. They originate from Macedonia,
Greece, Turkey, Georgia, and Iran, with Turkey the focus point. Some
are things I've cooked in the past, while others were first-time
experiments -- the bread and desserts are in the latter category.
All turned out well. Only complaint I have is that the muhammara
came out too viscous -- looks like I left out a little water --
and I may have throttled the pomegranate and hot pepper back a bit
too much. Could have used more tomatoes in the yogurt kebab sauce --
seems to me that the recipe doesn't call for enough, but I didn't
remember that until I ran out. Didn't do it all myself: had a few
helpers, which made a big difference. One reason for doing stuff
like this is that it helps explain how the world works. I had to
fend off several queries as to whether I'm Turkish. Nowhere near.
Just like the food. But I've found is that you can cook damn near
anything if you can find the ingredients, or reasonable facsimiles,
and can follow instructions.

The Joke's on Kerry

I finally saw a videotape of John Kerry's famous "botched joke" --
the one the Republicans jumped all over because somewhere in their
reptilian memory cells they remembered that he's one guy they can
beat. The funny thing is that I had no problem following the logic
of the joke, even though it wasn't what I expected given all the
brouhaha. The dummy -- err, failed student -- who's stuck in Iraq
is clearly George W. Bush. All you need to put that together is a
bit of context -- that Bush isn't all that bright, that invading
Iraq was a pretty stupid thing to do, and that he's the one who's
stuck there with his pants down whacking off to his vision of total
victory -- and rudimentary skills with the English language.

So why didn't anyone get it? One reason is that regardless of
how stupid Bush is, that's not the main one of his character flaws
that led him to Sadr City. For that, start with arrogance, to the
point where he has a perverse, almost pornographic eagnerness to
shed other people's blood. But also, even if he didn't have all
his marbles, he had plenty of smart people around him to convince
him that he had that angle covered -- certainly a lot smarter than
Kerry, who never seems to have developed a clue about how he was
used both to start and to continue the war. In fact, such brains
were a necessary ingredient: it took some amazing intellectual
gymnastics to come up with the notion that an American occupation
of Iraq would be welcomed with flowers, leading to transformation
of the entire region into an enclave of enlightened Israel-lovers.
I mean, stupid people can't come up with stuff like that -- even
if they're dumb enough to believe it.

But the other problem with Kerry's joke was that it scratched
a chain of thought which Kerry himself almost certainly does not
believe, but almost every one of the rest of us do believe: that
only stupid losers wind up serving in the US military in Iraq. Of
course, that's not true either, but it has enough truth to it to
hurt, and that's what causes people to flinch. Different people
have different reasons for signing up, but the most common one is
lack of career opportunities. And that connects back to the logic
because we tend to associate bad careers with lack or education.
And Kerry did start out talking about the bad things that happen
when you fail to get a good education.

I also saw a tape of Bush's non sequitur demand that Kerry apologize
for his affront to "the brave men and women serving our country in Iraq"
(or words to that effect). Logically, it's a lot like one guy accuses
another of being a drunk, and the other demands that the first guy
apologize to all the drunks he offended. So why didn't anyone respond
in kind -- e.g., demand that Bush apologize to the soldiers for sending
them into a hellhole for no rhyme or purpose? I can think of several
reasons, including the hollow one that the president deserves respect,
even though he shows no respect to anyone else. But the main one, I
think, is that we disagree on who or what the soldiers are. For Bush
and his prowar claque, soldiers are little more than symbols of armed
might, fetishes of war -- certainly not people who suffer for the
mistakes of politicians and generals. They are the essential props of
Bush's photo ops, human shields for his war program. And so he seeks
to raise them on a pedestal, to elevate them beyond reproach, or even
humanity.

Which leads us to another why? It doesn't require much in the way
of observational skills to discover that US soldiers in Iraq have
faults and foibles -- that they are confused, misinformed, fearful,
prone to destructive acts which undermine their mission. Also that
they bleed, and that many who escape that fate come back bruised
and battered anyway. But we close our eyes to such things, and let
our brains go amok, because we still love the idea that war is the
way real men change things. And this is why Kerry makes such a good
foil for Bush: Kerry is even more committed to the myth than Bush
is. Bush, after all, uses it mostly because it works. Kerry actually
signed up and went to war -- the irony in all this is that he was
the one dumb enough to get stuck, in his case in Vietnam. Bush, at
least, was smart enough to stay clear of that one.

News of the World

Front page news from the Wichita Eagle this morning: "By 2048, fish
may not be on the menu":

Clambakes, crab cakes, swordfish steaks and even humble fish sticks
could be little more than a fond memory in a few decades.

If current trends of overfishing and pollution continue, the
populations of just about all seafood face collapse by 2048, a team of
ecologists and economists warns in a report in today's issue of the
journal Science.

"Whether we looked at tide pools or studies over the entire world's
ocean, we saw the same picture emerging. In losing species we lose the
productivity and stability of entire ecosystems," said the lead author
Boris Worm, a marine biologist at Canada's Dalhousie University, in
Halifax, Nova Scotia.

"I was shocked and disturbed by how consistent these trends are --
beyond anything we suspected," Worm said.

"We really see the end of the line now," he said. "It's within our
lifetime. Our children will see a world without seafood if we don't
change things."

And more:

Oregon state University marine biologist Jane Lubchenco said the
study makes clear that fish stocks are in trouble, even though
consumers appear to have a cornucopia of seafood choices.

"I think people don't get it," Lubchenco said. "They think, 'If
there is a problem with the oceans, how come the case in my grocery
store is so full?' There is a disconnect.

The possible collapse of commercial fisheries could have a serious
effect on the global economy, said Gerald Leape, vice president for
the advocacy group National Environmental Trust. The industry
generates $80 billion a year, Leape said, and more than 200 million
people depend directly or indirectly on fishing for their main source
of income. Worldwide, a billion people eat seafood as their main
source of animal protein.

The article doesn't broach the question of what people will eat
instead of fish, or indeed whether they will eat. The problem here
is that loss of fisheries isn't the only looming limit on how much
food we can produce. Modern industrial agriculture requires ever
increasing energy inputs, which largely depend on declining fossil
fuel stocks. Soil and water also have limits. Population is still
increasing. While most projections imagine a soft levelling off at
around nine billion -- 50% more people than now -- I'm haunted by
a projection chart in Richard Heinberg's The Party's Over,
which shows how population grew as we pumped more oil, and projects
a fall as the oil runs out -- not all the way back to pre-oil levels,
but to a bit less than the current six billion. That means, to be
blunt, that massive numbers of people will starve to death before
we are able to find a population level that matches our resources.

I'm not saying that this is fated, any more than the researchers
are saying there's no way anyone will eat fish in 2048. But it is
a possibility, and its likelihood increases as long as we try to
keep living the way we've been living. And it's also possible that
the situation could get worse still, because there's more going on
than this isolated study can show.

Over the past quarter-century, and especially in the past 10 years,
America's very rich have grown much richer. No one else fared as
well.

In 2004, the richest 1 percent of households -- 719,910 of them,
with an average annual incomeof $326,720 -- had 19.8 percent of the
entire nation's pretax income. That's up from 17.8 percent a year
earlier, according to a study by University of California-Berkeley
economist Emmanuel Saez.

The study, titled "The Evolution of Top Incomes," also found that
the richest one-tenth of 1 percent of Americans -- 129,584 households
in 2004 -- reported income equal to 9.5 percent of national pretax
income.

However, median, or midpoint, family income rose only 1.6 percent
between 2001 and 2004, when adjusted for inflation, according to the
Federal Reserve. Median family real net worth -- a family's gross
assets minus liabilities -- rose only 1.5 percent during those four
years.

Those are very sluggish income growth rates compared with the four
years between 1998 and 2001, when median family income grew by 9.5
percent and median family real net worth grew by 10.3 percent.

Experts disagree on the causes, but they're in near agreement that
this trend threatens to erode a fundamental American belief about
fairness.

"It's not the actual getting ahead in America that's so important
-- it's been Americans' deep belief that they have the opportunity to
get ahead. And if you lose that, there's damage to our society," said
Douglas Holtz-Eakin, who until last year was director of the
nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office and before that was chief
economist for President George W. Bush.

Interesting how a Bush advisor becomes "nonpartisan" just by
changing jobs. But the point about the perception of opportunity
being more critical than actual advancement is well taken. The
big problem here is that there's a lag between changes in reality
and changes in perception. When the latter kick in it's likely to
become a shock, especially to those who thought they'd always be
able to get away with it.

Methodologically, just checking on the very top and the median
doesn't give you a lot of detail. That the median seems to hold
steady doesn't mean that "everyone else stays put." Fifty percent
of the population are below that median, and every one of those,
by definition, are doing less well. The questions of how many are
doing how badly, and how their plight might rebound on the rest
of us, are subject for further study. One thing we have seen is
that violent crime has started to inch up again, after a long
period of decline, despite more jails and ever more draconian
prosecution.

Thus far, increasing inequality has been tolerated politically,
at least within the US. But that's largely been within the context
of a growing economy, where lifestyles have been improved as much
by technological progress as anything else. Any number of things
can change that, leading to a declining economy with a reduction
in resources. The effect of this would be to shift from a positive
sum game, where everyone can theoretically gain, to a negative sum
game, where losers outnumber winners by vast margins. Such a world
should satisfy the Hobbesians, who always felt that life -- for
others, anyway -- is naturally nasty, brutish, and short.

That both of these "news" items are mere reports on research
studies is typical of the media these days, which seems incapable
of reporting on anything deeper than what so-called experts are
saying. On the other hand, such studies are the only way longer
term issues can crack the news mentality.

F5 Record Report (#14: November 2, 2006)

Last week's F5 Record Report wasn't posted on the website until
Tuesday or Wednesday this week. This week's came out on late
Thursday, pretty much on time. Find it with the usual
link and
work your way back. I was stuck deep in Jazz CG when I knocked
this one off, and scraped a couple of thing from a future
Recycled Goods for variation. The lineup is:

Next one, finished tonight, is going to be pretty much in that same
vein, although Jazz CG has been handed in to the Voice, and Recycled
Goods is waiting a friendly edit before making its way to Static. For
the first time in a long time, I don't have any real pressing music
deadlines. That means I can finally get around to listening to some
non-jazz, non-reissue stuff that's been piling up unheard -- which
was a big part of the idea behind doing F5.

Letter to publicists:

This week's F5 Record Report presumably has a record of interest to
you. F5 is a weekly entertainment tabloid distributed free here in
Wichita KS. I cover 6-8 records per week, sometimes recycling from
other columns. The following URL will get you the latest column,
and the "next article" links will cycle you back in time.
http://www.f5wichita.com/mba.php?id=55
For more info, see:
http://tomhull.com/ocston/music.php
The index by label:
ACT: Ulf Wakenius
ECM: Keith Jarrett
EMI (Virgin): Fountains of Wayne
Motema: Lynne Arriale
Smalls: Frank Hewitt
Universal: Chuck Berry, Etta James
Thanks for your interest and support.